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Emotion processing in early blind and sighted individuals.

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  • 1Department of Psychology, University of Milano-Bicocca.

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Early blindness impacts emotional processing lateralization. While blind individuals accurately detect emotions, their brains show less specialized hemispheric processing compared to sighted individuals, suggesting vision is key for this development.

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Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Sensory Processing

Background:

  • Emotion processing involves complex brain networks with hemispheric specialization.
  • Cognitive functions, like language lateralization, may depend on visual development.
  • The impact of lacking visual experience on emotional processing lateralization is not well understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if the absence of prior visual experience affects the development of specialized hemispheric lateralization in emotional processing.
  • To compare emotional processing in early blind individuals versus sighted controls.

Main Methods:

  • A dichotic listening task was employed.
  • Participants detected emotional vocalizations (happiness, sadness) presented to either ear.
  • Performance was compared between early blind individuals and sighted controls.

Main Results:

  • Sighted individuals exhibited typical lateralization: enhanced positive vocalization detection in the right ear (left hemisphere) and negative vocalization detection in the left ear (right hemisphere).
  • Blind individuals showed accurate emotion valence detection, comparable to sighted controls.
  • However, the blind group's performance did not align with any specific pattern of hemispheric lateralization.

Conclusions:

  • Lack of prior visual experience does not impair the ability to process emotion valence.
  • Normal visual development appears crucial for establishing the typical degree of hemispheric lateralization in emotional processing.
  • These findings highlight the interconnectedness of sensory experience and neurocognitive development.