4.8 Article

A thalamocortical pathway for fast rerouting of tactile information to occipital cortex in congenital blindness

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-13173-7

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Funding

  1. National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada [436355-13]
  2. NIH [1R01EB026299-01]
  3. Tier-1 Canada Research Chair in Neural Dynamics of Brain Systems
  4. Brain Canada Foundation [PSG15-3755]
  5. Lundbeck foundation, Denmark
  6. AXA Research Fund
  7. Harland Sanders Chair in Visual Science (Universite de Montreal)

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In congenitally blind individuals, the occipital cortex responds to various nonvisual inputs. Some animal studies raise the possibility that a subcortical pathway allows fast re-routing of tactile information to the occipital cortex, but this has not been shown in humans. Here we show using magnetoencephalography (MEG) that tactile stimulation produces occipital cortex activations, starting as early as 35 ms in congenitally blind individuals, but not in blindfolded sighted controls. Given our measured thalamic response latencies of 20 ms and a mean estimated lateral geniculate nucleus to primary visual cortex transfer time of 15 ms, we claim that this early occipital response is mediated by a direct thalamo-cortical pathway. We also observed stronger directed connectivity in the alpha band range from posterior thalamus to occipital cortex in congenitally blind participants. Our results strongly suggest the contribution of a fast thalamo-cortical pathway in the cross-modal activation of the occipital cortex in congenitally blind humans.

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