(Press-News.org) Contact information: Heather Dewar
hdewar@umd.edu
301-405-9267
University of Maryland
A short stay in darkness may heal hearing woes
Simulated blindness gives adult mice sharper hearing, Maryland researchers find
Call it the Ray Charles Effect: a young child who is blind develops a keen ability to hear things that others cannot. Researchers have long known that very young brains are malleable enough to re-wire some circuits that process sensory information. Now researchers at the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins University have overturned conventional wisdom, showing the brains of adult mice can also be re-wired to compensate for a temporary vision loss by improving their hearing.
The findings, published Feb. 5 in the peer-reviewed journal Neuron, may lead to treatments for people with hearing loss or tinnitus, said Patrick Kanold, an associate professor of biology at UMD who partnered with Hey-Kyoung Lee, an associate professor of neuroscience at JHU, to lead the study.
"There is some level of interconnectedness of the senses in the brain that we are revealing here," Kanold said.
"We can perhaps use this to benefit our efforts to recover a lost sense," said Lee. "By temporarily preventing vision, we may be able to engage the adult brain to change the circuit to better process sound."
Kanold explained that there is an early "critical period" for hearing, similar to the better-known critical period for vision. The auditory system in the brain of a very young child quickly learns its way around its sound environment, becoming most sensitive to the sounds it encounters most often. But once that critical period is past, the auditory system doesn't respond to changes in the individual's soundscape.
"This is why we can't hear certain tones in Chinese if we didn't learn Chinese as children," Kanold said. "This is also why children get screened for hearing deficits and visual deficits early. You cannot fix it after the critical period."
Kanold, an expert on how the brain processes sound, and Lee, an expert on the same processes in vision, thought the adult brain might be flexible if it were forced to work across the senses rather than within one sense. They used a simple, reversible technique to simulate blindness: they placed adult mice with normal vision and hearing in complete darkness for six to eight days.
After the adult mice were returned to a normal light-dark cycle, their vision was unchanged. But they heard much better than before.
The researchers played a series of one-note tones and tested the responses of individual neurons in the auditory cortex, a part of the brain devoted exclusively to hearing. Specifically, they tested neurons in a middle layer of the auditory cortex that receives signals from the thalamus, a part of the midbrain that acts as a switchboard for sensory information. The neurons in this layer of the auditory cortex, called the thalamocortical recipient layer, were generally not thought to be malleable in adults.
But the team found that for the mice that experienced simulated blindness these neurons did, in fact, change. In the mice placed in darkness, the tested neurons fired faster and more powerfully when the tones were played, were more sensitive to quiet sounds, and could discriminate sounds better. These mice also developed more synapses, or neural connections, between the thalamus and the auditory cortex.
The fact that the changes occurred in the cortex, an advanced sensory processing center structured about the same way in most mammals, suggests that flexibility across the senses is a fundamental trait of mammals' brains, Kanold said.
"This makes me hopeful that we would see it in higher animals too," including humans, he said. "We don't know how many days a human would have to be in the dark to get this effect, and whether they would be willing to do that. But there might be a way to use multi-sensory training to correct some sensory processing problems in humans."
The mice that experienced simulated blindness eventually reverted to normal hearing after a few weeks in a normal light-dark cycle. In the next phase of their five-year study, Kanold and Lee plan to look for ways to make the sensory improvements permanent, and to look beyond individual neurons to study broader changes in the way the brain processes sounds.
INFORMATION:
The National Institutes of Health funded this research through National Eye Institute (NEI) Grant R01EY022720 and National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Strokes (NINDS) Grant R21NS070645.
-UMDCP/CMNS
Media contacts:
Heather Dewar, UMD
301-405-9267
hdewar@umd.edu
Latarsha Gatlin, JHU
443-997-9909
lgatlin1@jhu.edu
University of Maryland College of Computer, Mathematical and Natural Sciences http://www.cmns.umd.edu
A short stay in darkness may heal hearing woes
Simulated blindness gives adult mice sharper hearing, Maryland researchers find
2014-02-05
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Simulated blindness can help revive hearing, researchers find
2014-02-05
Minimizing a person's sight for as little as a week may help improve the brain's ability to process hearing, neuroscientists have found.
Hey-Kyoung Lee, an associate professor of neuroscience and researcher ...
The anatomy of an asteroid
2014-02-05
Using very precise ground-based observations, Stephen Lowry (University of Kent, UK) and colleagues have measured the speed at which the near-Earth asteroid (25143) Itokawa spins and how that spin rate is changing over time. They have combined these delicate ...
Policymakers and scientists agree on top research questions
2014-02-05
Natural resource managers, policymakers and their advisers, and scientists ...
Vanadium dioxide research opens door to new, multifunctional spintronic smart sensors
2014-02-05
Research from a team led by North Carolina State University is opening the door to smarter sensors by integrating the smart material vanadium dioxide onto a silicon chip ...
World temperature records available via Google Earth
2014-02-05
Climate researchers at the University of East Anglia have made the world's temperature records available via Google Earth.
The Climatic Research Unit Temperature Version 4 (CRUTEM4) land-surface air temperature ...
Time is of the essence
2014-02-05
New findings in mice suggest that merely changing meal times could have a significant effect on the levels of triglycerides in the liver. The results of this Weizmann Institute of Science study, recently published in Cell Metabolism, ...
Researchers discover rare new species of deep-diving whale
2014-02-05
Researchers have identified a new species of mysterious beaked whale based on the study of seven animals stranded on remote tropical islands in the Indian and Pacific Oceans over the past ...
Attractive professional cyclists are faster
2014-02-05
In a range of species, females show clear preferences when it comes to the choice of their partner – they decide on the basis of external features like antler size or plumage coloration whether a male will be a good ...
National poll shows public divided on genetic testing to predict cancer risk
2014-02-05
A national poll from the University of Utah's Huntsman Cancer Institute shows 34 percent of respondents would ...
'False memories' -- the hidden side of our good memory
2014-02-05
Justice blindly trusts human memory. Every year throughout the world hundreds of thousands of court cases are heard based solely on the testimony of somebody who swears that they are reproducing exactly an ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Cambridge scientist reveals how curiosity transformed toxic protein discovery
The diamonds that could find cancer
Supernovae: How to spot them at record speed
Kelp forests in Marine Protected Areas are more resilient to marine heatwaves
Smarter hydrogel surface achieves 5× faster oil–water separation
Novel unsymmetrical molecule produces perfect photocatalyst potential
Takotsubo Syndrome: The hidden heart risks in Intensive Care Units
Charting the evolution of life through the ancient chaetognath
Two genomes are better than one for studying reptile sex
Is your health care provider really listening to you?
Mary Jo Pugh earns national Outstanding Research Accomplishment Award for uncovering long-term consequences of TBI
Ochsner Children’s performs first robotic-assisted pediatric spine surgery in Louisiana
U. Iowa research identifies promising new target for treating rare, aggressive childhood cancer
North Pacific waters are acidifying more rapidly below the surface
Researchers find intensive blood pressure targets are cost-effective
A shape-changing antenna for more versatile sensing and communication
New method advances reliability of AI with applications in medical diagnostics
Catching a 'eureka' before it strikes: New research spots the signs
An alphabet for hand actions in the human brain
When rattlesnakes marry their cousins
Mass spectrometry sequencing of circulating antibodies from a malaria-exposed child provides new insight into malaria immunity
SwRI-led work confirms decades-old theoretical models about solar reconnection
New Study identifies early signs of valve failure one year after TAVI, raising durability concerns in younger patients
Untangling glucose traffic jams in Type 2 diabetes
University of Houston professor creates new drug delivery system to tackle lupus
Community-based approach boosts family engagement in ADHD care
Identifying a compass in the human brain
How AI support can go wrong in safety-critical settings
American Geriatrics Society unveils updated alternatives to potentially harmful medications for older adults
Conflicts of interest on CDC vaccine panel were at historic lows before RFK Jr. dismissal
[Press-News.org] A short stay in darkness may heal hearing woesSimulated blindness gives adult mice sharper hearing, Maryland researchers find