很多人都相信上帝是公平的,關上眼前的一扇窗會為你打開另一扇窗。在最新的科學研究中我們也能得到類似的結論:天生聽力有缺陷的人會有更好的視覺。
Recent research explains how the deaf can have extraordinary sight. Christie Nicholson reports
Is it an old wives tale or can deaf people actually see better? Scientists have long thought that the structure of our brain is fixed. For instance, from birth the auditory cortex will receive only sound or the visual cortex will receive only visual input.
But in the last decade neuroscientists have overthrown this idea in favor of a more malleable brain.
New research published this week in the journal Nature Neuroscience supports that view. It helps explain why those who are congenitally deaf may have extraordinary sight.
Since the auditory cortex sits there, at birth, waiting for auditory inputs that never come, it starts receiving visual stimuli instead—in cats anyway. And the neural real estate devoted to vision increases.
Researchers compared congenitally deaf cats to hearing cats, and found that deaf cats have enhanced peripheral vision and motion detection.
They confirmed that the part of the auditory cortex that picks up peripheral sound switches to peripheral vision.
With the deaf it’s especially good to have increased peripheral vision. If you cannot hear a car approaching from the side, it'd be advantageous to actually see it.
—Christie Nicholson