Rapid Integration of Tactile and Visual Information by a Newly Sighted Child

How we learn to interact with and understand our environment for the first time is an age-old philosophical question. Scientists have long sought to understand what is the origin of egocentric spatial localization and the perceptual integration of touch and visual information. It is difficult to stu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current biology 2016-04, Vol.26 (8), p.1069-1074
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Jie, Wu, En-De, Chen, Xin, Zhu, Lu-He, Li, Xiaoman, Thorn, Frank, Ostrovsky, Yuri, Qu, Jia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:How we learn to interact with and understand our environment for the first time is an age-old philosophical question. Scientists have long sought to understand what is the origin of egocentric spatial localization and the perceptual integration of touch and visual information. It is difficult to study the beginnings of intermodal visual-motor and visual-tactile linkages in early infancy since infants’ muscular strength and control cannot accurately guide visual-motor behavior and they do not concentrate well [1–6]. Alternatively, one can examine young children who have a restored congenital sensory modality loss. They are the best infant substitute if they are old enough for good muscle control and young enough to be within the classic critical period for neuroplasticity [7, 8]. Recovery studies after removal of dense congenital cataracts are examples of this, but most are performed on older subjects [9–14]. We report here the results of video-recorded experiments on a congenitally blind child, beginning immediately after surgical restoration of vision. Her remarkably rapid development of accurate reaching and grasping showed that egocentric spatial localization requires neural circuitry needing less than a half hour of spatially informative experience to be calibrated. 32 hr after first sight, she visually recognized an object that she had simultaneously looked at and held, even though she could not use single senses alone (vision to vision; touch to touch) to perform this recognition until the following day. Then she also performed intersensory transfer of tactile object experience to visual object recognition, demonstrating that the two senses are prearranged to immediately become calibrated to one another. •After cataract removal, a blind child accurately reached and grasped in 24 min•The next day, she immediately recognized by sight an object previously held and seen•On day 3, she held an object without seeing it and then recognized it by sight•Visual-motor and intersensory integration and transfer developed very rapidly Chen et al. removed dense congenital cataracts from both eyes of a young blind Tibetan girl. Just 24 min after first sight, she accurately reached for objects. On day 2, she recognized an object by sight that had been simultaneously held and seen, but she could not recognize an object by sight or touch that was just examined by sight or touch alone.
ISSN:0960-9822
1879-0445
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2016.02.065