Clinical Trial: Brain Plasticity of Verbal Memory in the Blind

Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Completed
Study Type: Observational

Official Title: Cross-Modal Plasticity of Verbal Memory in the Blind

Brief Summary:

This study will examine whether blind people develop changes in the brain that improve memory function. Previous studies have shown that blind people, on average, perform better in memory tasks than sighted people. A possible reason for this is that parts of the brain that process visual information in sighted individuals are engaged in processing mnemonic (remembering) information in blind people.

Blind and sighted people 18 years of age and older are eligible for this study. Healthy, sighted individuals may participate in Part 1 of the study, which is designed to find appropriate words to use in tests for Part 2 of the study. Part 2 will include sighted people and blind people. It will examine whether the (visual) brain in blind people is processing mnemonic information in a way that helps with day-to-day memory functions. Blind participants in this study must have lost their sight by age 4. Candidates will be screened with a medical interview and examination and a brief test of short-term and long-term verbal memory. Sighted patients will also be tested for visual memory and for handedness.

Part 1 - Word Recognition Testing (2 sessions)

  • Session 1: Participants listen to a number of words over a loudspeaker and try to remember them for a memory test that will be given 30 minutes later. For the test, subjects listen to words again and press one of three buttons as quickly as possible after hearing the word. The buttons signal whether the subject does or does not recognize the word with a 1) high level of confidence or 2) low level of confidence.
  • Session 2: Participants hear a noun over a loudspeaker and have to find an appropriate verb for it, such as the verb (read) for the noun (book).

Detailed Summary:

Cross-modal plasticity refers to the concept that the cortex normally responsive to one sensory modality, when deprived of its usual input, becomes responsive to inputs from other sensory modalities. In blind subjects, the visual cortex processes somatosensory and auditory information. A recent functional imaging study found that verbal memory recall and verb generation significantly activated the primary visual cortex in early blind humans. The magnitude of occipital activation was positively correlated with subsequent performance on verbal memory and verb generation tasks. These results raised the untested hypothesis that the primary visual cortex may be the neural substrate mediating superior verbal memory performance in early blind individuals. The purpose of this protocol is to test this hypothesis.

The first experiment will identify the magnitude of activation in cortical areas associated with successful verbal memory encoding and retrieval, and with verb generation, in blind individuals and sighted controls. The expected outcome is increased involvement of the visual cortex in the early blind group. In the second experiment, we will test the hypothesis that disruption of activity of the activated visual cortex (using TMS) will have deleterious effects on verbal memory encoding and verb generation in early blind subjects, but not in late blind subjects nor sighted controls. The TMS experiment is necessary to identify a cause-effect link between occipital activation and improved memory performance.

Experiment 1: We plan to study early blind subjects, late blind subjects and sighted controls during encoding into and retrieval from episodic verbal memory, and during verb generation, using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The primary outcome measure will be the number of voxels significantly activated in pri
Sponsor: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)

Current Primary Outcome:

Original Primary Outcome:

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Original Secondary Outcome:

Information By: National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)

Dates:
Date Received: April 19, 2003
Date Started: April 2003
Date Completion: April 2005
Last Updated: March 3, 2008
Last Verified: April 2005