MADVIS

MAPPING THE DEPRIVED VISUAL SYSTEM: CRACKING FUNCTION FOR PREDICTION

One of the most striking demonstrations of experience-dependent plasticity comes from studies of blind individuals showing that the occipital cortex (traditionally considered as purely visual) massively changes its functional tuning to support the processing of non-visual inputs.

These mechanisms of crossmodal plasticity, classically considered compensatory, inevitably raise crucial challenges for sight-restoration.

 

 

The neglected relation between crossmodal plasticity and sight-recovery will represent the testing ground of MADVIS in order to gain important novel insights on how specific brain regions become, stay and change their functional tuning toward the processing of specific stimuli.

The main goal of MADVIS is therefore to make a breakthrough on two fronts:

  1. Understanding how visual deprivation at different sensitive periods in development affects the functional organization and connectivity of the occipital cortex;
  2. And use the fundamental knowledge derived from (1) to test and predict the outcome of sight restoration.

Using a pioneering interdisciplinary approach that crosses the boundaries between cognitive neurosciences and ophthalmology, MADVIS will have a large impact on our understanding of how experience at different sensitive periods shapes the response properties of specific brain regions.

Finally, in its attempt to fill the existing gap between crossmodal reorganization and sight restoration, MADVIS will eventually pave the way for a new generation of predictive surveys prior to sensory restoration.

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Host Institution since 2016: UCLouvain
Beneficiaries : Università degli Studi di Trento and UCLouvain

This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme under the grant agreement number 337573.