Interacting with the external environment is an inherently multisensory experience. Therefore, understanding how unisensory deprivations occurring early in life affect this interaction has always been a hot topic of research. In this thesis I aim to contribute to this prolific debate by further investigating the effects on behavior exerted by early-acquired bilateral deafness. In the past decades many studies have extensively investigated this topic, focusing mainly on explaining the changes occurring within the visual modality of deaf people, ultimately aiming at understanding to what extent the intuitive assumption that deaf adults ‘see better’ than hearing controls is really true. This approach proved highly informative, yet many fundame...
Visual stimuli are known to activate the auditory cortex of deaf people, presenting evidence of cros...
Sensory deprivation, as in hearing loss and deafness, alters the normal development and connectivity...
Congenitally deaf individuals, compared to hearing individuals, typically show differential performa...
The present thesis addresses the cross-modal plasticity occurring in the visual modality due to pro...
One of the most striking demonstrations of experience-dependent plasticity comes from studies of sen...
The possibility that, following early auditory deprivation, the remaining senses such as vision are ...
Theories of cross-modal plasticity have explored how a certain modality can be repurposed after prol...
The loss of one sensory modality can lead to a reorganization of the other intact sensory modalities...
The present thesis investigates the effects of auditory deafferentation and reafferentation with a u...
We highlight the results of those studies that have investigated the plastic reorganization processe...
Deaf people have only an attenuated experience, if any, of hearing. The study of individuals born de...
How do deaf and deafblind individuals process touch? This question offers a unique model to understa...
The principles that guide large-scale cortical reorganization remain unclear. In the blind, several ...
This article was supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG) and the Open Access Publication F...
The aim of this thesis has been to explore neural substrates of enhanced far-peripheral visual motio...
Visual stimuli are known to activate the auditory cortex of deaf people, presenting evidence of cros...
Sensory deprivation, as in hearing loss and deafness, alters the normal development and connectivity...
Congenitally deaf individuals, compared to hearing individuals, typically show differential performa...
The present thesis addresses the cross-modal plasticity occurring in the visual modality due to pro...
One of the most striking demonstrations of experience-dependent plasticity comes from studies of sen...
The possibility that, following early auditory deprivation, the remaining senses such as vision are ...
Theories of cross-modal plasticity have explored how a certain modality can be repurposed after prol...
The loss of one sensory modality can lead to a reorganization of the other intact sensory modalities...
The present thesis investigates the effects of auditory deafferentation and reafferentation with a u...
We highlight the results of those studies that have investigated the plastic reorganization processe...
Deaf people have only an attenuated experience, if any, of hearing. The study of individuals born de...
How do deaf and deafblind individuals process touch? This question offers a unique model to understa...
The principles that guide large-scale cortical reorganization remain unclear. In the blind, several ...
This article was supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG) and the Open Access Publication F...
The aim of this thesis has been to explore neural substrates of enhanced far-peripheral visual motio...
Visual stimuli are known to activate the auditory cortex of deaf people, presenting evidence of cros...
Sensory deprivation, as in hearing loss and deafness, alters the normal development and connectivity...
Congenitally deaf individuals, compared to hearing individuals, typically show differential performa...