Silencing to See: Deaf Brains Map Visual Space Through Auditory Cortex Deactivation

TL;DR Summary
In congenitally deaf individuals, the auditory cortex represents visual space not by increasing activity but via systematic deactivation of neural signals, with responses biased to the opposite visual field and central vision, suggesting inhibitory mechanisms reconfigure cross-modal plasticity to optimize visual attention.
Redefining Neuroplasticity Through Selective Deactivation Neuroscience News
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