Blindness Clinical Trial
Official title:
Enhanced Tactile Memory in the Blind
This study will determine if the brain regions in blind people that would normally be
involved in vision are used instead to remember touch. Blind people have an enhanced sense
of touch compared to sighted people, and they also perform better on tests for certain kinds
of memory. This study will examine and compare the results of a touch memory test in blind
and sighted people to determine what brain areas are involved in responding to touch.
Blind people and sighted volunteers between 18 and 80 years of age who have no psychiatric
problems or neurological problems (other than blindness) may be eligible for this study.
Candidates are screened with a medical interview and examination.
Participants undergo one or both of the following procedures:
Behavioral experiment
Sighted participants are blindfolded during this experiment. Subjects sit comfortably in
front of a table. They are presented with a number of surfaces placed on a table one at a
time and are given 10 seconds to feel each surface with the index finger on their dominant
hand. They must concentrate and memorize the surfaces as best they can. After a 15-minute
break, they are again presented with a series of surfaces and given 10 seconds to feel each
one. This time, they must say as quickly as possibly whether the surface is one they touched
previously or is a new surface.
Functional MRI
MRI uses a strong magnetic field and radio waves to obtain images of body organs and
tissues. In this study, subjects undergo MRI scanning of the brain while performing the same
touch test described above. For the MRI, the subject lies on a table that slides into the
scanner. The MRI machine detects change in the brain regions involved in performing the
task.
In the blind, areas of the brain that would normally respond to visual stimuli instead of
process information from other sensory modalities such as the somatosensory and auditory
domains. Recent studies have shown that the visual cortex of the blind participates in
higher-order processing of auditory information including verb generation and retrieval of
verbal memories. Because tactile information plays a similarly crucial role when vision is
missing (i.e. to read Braille), it has been suggested that the ability to encode and recall
tactile information in the blind is superior to that in the sighted.
OBJECTIVES:
The first objective of this protocol is to determine if tactile memory is superior in early
blind subjects relative to that in late blind and sighted control subjects.
The second objective is to determine if the visual cortex of blind people can participate in
higher-order processing of tactile information such as tactile encoding recognition.
STUDY POPULATION:
Our experiments will make use of early blind, late blind, and sighted control subjects.
DESIGN:
Experiment 1: We will quantify the ability of our study populations to encode into and
retrieve from episodic tactile memory. Subjects will be presented with a series of surfaces
that they are to palpate and commit to memory, after which they will rest for ten to fifteen
minutes. The old surfaces will then be presented again with a same number of new surfaces
randomly interleaved. Subjects are to discriminate old from new surfaces.
Experiment 2: We will identify cortical areas associated with successful tactile memory
encoding and retrieval in blind individuals and sighted controls using functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI). Subjects will perform the memory task from Experiment 1 while in
the MRI machine.
OUTCOME MEASURES:
Experiment 1: The primary outcome measure will be recognition memory, a corrected measure of
the number of old stimuli correctly remembered.
Experiment 2: The primary outcome measure will be the number of voxels significantly
activated in primary visual cortex in early blind subjects as compared to late blind
subjects and sighted controls.
We expect the magnitude of visual cortex activation in the early blind during a tactile
memory task to correlate with superior performance on the task.
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