Domain Specific Functional Plasticity of Visual Processing Constrained by General Cognitive Ability in Deaf Individuals
Dong, C.; Wang, Z.; Zuo, X.; Wang, S.
Show abstract
Interpersonal communication relies on integrating facial and vocal signals to extract multidimensional communicative information. How the absence of audition reshapes the communicative system remains unclear. We compared the performance of deaf (N=136) and hearing (N=135) adults across multiple domains, facial identity, emotional expression, speech, and global motion, through a series of unisensory and audiovisual psychophysical tasks. The results showed that, in hearing individuals, reliance on facial versus vocal signals differed across domains. In deaf individuals, auditory deprivation did not produce uniform enhancement or impairment of visual processing. Instead, they exhibited reduced sensitivity to dynamic emotional expressions and global motion, preserved sensitivity to facial identity (both static and dynamic) and static expressions, and enhanced categorization of facial speech. Notably, sensitivity to dynamic facial expressions and global motion was correlated, and both were explained by variations in fluid intelligence. Our results provide a systematic characterization of visual function across domains in deaf individuals, suggesting that the consequences of hearing loss are shaped both by the functional roles of audition within each domain and by broader cognitive adaptations. These findings advance understanding of cross-modal plasticity and inform the development of targeted ecologically valid accessibility and sensory-substitution strategies.
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