The fine-scale functional correlation of striate cortex in sighted and blind people

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Abstract

To what extent are spontaneous neural signals within striate cortex organized by vision? We examined the fine-scale pattern of striate cortex correlations within and between hemispheres in rest-state BOLD fMRI data from sighted and blind people. In the sighted, we find that corticocortico correlation is well modeled as a Gaussian point-spread function across millimeters of striate cortical surface, rather than degrees of visual angle. Blindness produces a subtle change in the pattern of fine-scale striate correlations between hemispheres. Across participants blind before the age of 18, the degree of pattern alteration covaries with the strength of long-range correlation between left striate cortex and Broca's area. This suggests that early blindness exchanges local, vision-driven pattern synchrony of the striate cortices for long-range functional correlations potentially related to cross-modal representation. ©2013 the authors.

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Butt, O. H., Benson, N. C., Datta, R., & Aguirre, G. K. (2013). The fine-scale functional correlation of striate cortex in sighted and blind people. Journal of Neuroscience, 33(41), 16209–16219. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0363-13.2013

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