While many studies have shown that vision is altered and/or enhanced in deaf people, it is not known how this develops. The current proposal is the first to study visual development in deaf people from infancy to adulthood, as well as in hearing restored (HR) children who received cochlear implants (CIs) by 18 months, a cohort that is increasingly on the rise.
In Aim 1, we measure different visual abilities (including motion, form, face and object perception) in deaf and hearing infants (6 - 10 months), children (6 - 10 years) and adults, using comparable stimuli/paradigms across ages. Many deaf people use a visual language, American Sign Language (ASL), and thus to tease apart whether altered vision in deaf signers is due to deafness or to experience with ASL, we test a third control group of hearing signers, who were born to deaf signing parents and have roughly the same ASL experience as deaf people who also learned ASL early. In infants, we test these same three analogous groups (sign-exposed deaf infants, non-sign-exposed hearing infants, and sign-exposed hearing infants), as well as an additional control group, i.e., non-sign-exposed deaf infants. To test the effects of ASL further, we ask whether the degree of altered vision correlates with receptive ASL proficiency, as measured with standardized ASL tests. By understanding the developmental trajectory of altered vision due to deafness vs. ASL, we hope to elucidate mechanisms of developmental plasticity.
Aim 2 asks whether there is an early critical period for the effects of deafness on visual perception, by investigating whether altered vision persists in HR children. We also measure receptive spoken language proficiency in HR children, which allows us to ask by when in development must auditory input be restored for auditory and speech processing to develop normally.
This aim also addresses a growing concern in the CI field that altered early vision in deaf people may hinder the efficacy of the CI. Here, the idea is that if deafness leads to functional reallocation of auditory cortex for visual processing, this might prevent the auditory cortex from being properly stimulated by CIs. If this is true, we expect to find that HR individuals with the most altered vision will show the worse proficiency in receptive spoken language. The current proposal will be the first to test this maladaptive hypothesis early in development, and the results should have implications for optimizing best long-term language outcomes in CI children.

Public Health Relevance

While many studies have shown that vision is altered and/or enhanced in deaf adults, the current proposal is the first to study visual development in deaf people from infancy to adulthood, teasing apart effects that result from deafness vs. experience with a visual-manual language, American Sign Language. The current proposal also studies visual perception and spoken language proficiency in hearing restored children who received cochlear implants (CIs), a cohort that is increasingly on the rise, testing whether altered vision persists in these children after hearing restoration. Results will provide insights into visual plasticity, critical periods, and the interplay between vision and language (ASL in the case of deaf signers and spoken language in the case of HR children).

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Eye Institute (NEI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
3R01EY024623-03S1
Application #
9483509
Study Section
Language and Communication Study Section (LCOM)
Program Officer
Wiggs, Cheri
Project Start
2015-04-01
Project End
2019-03-31
Budget Start
2017-07-01
Budget End
2018-03-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California, San Diego
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
804355790
City
La Jolla
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
92093