首页> 外文期刊>Brain research. Cognitive brain research >Visual contrast sensitivity in deaf versus hearing populations: exploring the perceptual consequences of auditory deprivation and experience with a visual language.
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Visual contrast sensitivity in deaf versus hearing populations: exploring the perceptual consequences of auditory deprivation and experience with a visual language.

机译:聋人和听觉人群的视觉对比敏感度:探索听觉剥夺的视觉后果和视觉语言体验。

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Early deafness in humans provides a unique opportunity to examine the perceptual consequences of altered sensory experience. In particular, visual perception in the deaf may be altered as a result of their auditory deprivation and/or because the deaf rely heavily upon a visual language (American Sign Language, or ASL, in the US). Recently, we found that deaf, but not hearing, subjects exhibit a right visual field/left hemisphere advantage on a low-level direction of motion task, a finding that has been attributed to the deaf's experience with ASL [Psychol. Sci. 10 (1999) 256; Brain Res. 405 (1987) 268]. In order to determine whether this visual field asymmetry generalizes to other low-level visual functions, in this study we measured contrast sensitivity in deaf and hearing subjects to moving stimuli over a range of speeds (0.125-64 degrees /s). We hypothesized that if ASL use drives differences between hearing and deaf subjects, such differences may occur over a restricted range of speeds most commonly found in ASL. In addition, we tested a third group, hearing native signers who learned ASL early from their deaf parents, to further assess whether potential differences between groups results from ASL use. These experiments reveal no overall differences in contrast sensitivity, nor differences in visual field asymmetries, across subject groups at any speed tested. Thus, differences previously observed between deaf and hearing subjects for discriminating the direction of moving stimuli do not generalize to contrast sensitivity for moving stimuli, a result that has implications for the neural level at which plastic changes occur in the visual system of deaf subjects.
机译:人类的早期耳聋提供了一个独特的机会来检查改变的感官体验的知觉后果。尤其是,聋人的视觉感知可能会由于其听觉剥夺和/或由于聋人严重依赖视觉语言(美国的美国手语或ASL)而发生变化。最近,我们发现聋哑人在低水平的运动方向上表现出了正确的视野/左半球优势,而听觉上却没有,这是由于聋哑人在ASL上的经历所致。科学10(1999)256;脑水库。 405(1987)268]。为了确定该视野不对称性是否可以推广到其他低级视觉功能,在本研究中,我们测量了聋人和听力对象在一定速度范围内(0.125-64度/ s)对运动刺激的对比敏感度。我们假设,如果使用ASL驱使听力和耳聋受试者之间的差异,则这种差异可能会在ASL中最常见的有限速度范围内发生。此外,我们测试了第三组,听取了从聋人父母那里早期学习ASL的本地签名者的信息,以进一步评估各组之间的潜在差异是否源于ASL的使用。这些实验显示,在任何测试速度下,受试者组之间对比敏感度没有整体差异,视野不对称也没有差异。因此,先前在聋人和听力受试者之间观察到的用于区分运动刺激方向的差异不能推广到对运动刺激的对比敏感性,这一结果对聋人视觉系统中发生塑性变化的神经水平有影响。

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