Learning braille could change your brain structure

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Image by Meine Reise geht hier leider zu Ende. Märchen beginnen mit from Pixabay
Image by Meine Reise geht hier leider zu Ende. Märchen beginnen mit from Pixabay

Learning braille alters specific regions of the brain, according to international researchers who have found that it reorganises the touch and vision-related regions of the brain's white mater to accommodate the new skill. The team used Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) to measure the changes in the white matter of sighted adults as they learned braille over eight months, taking measurements before, during, and after the training. They found that the white matter in regions related to touch strengthened over the full course of the training, but vision related white matter only started to change at the halfway point when the researchers say that braille words begin taking on semantic meaning. White matter returned to pre-training levels two and a half months after the training.

Media release

From: Society for Neuroscience

How Learning Braille Changes Brain Structure Over Time

White matter reorganizes at specific time points to meet the needs of the brain

Learning changes the brain, but when learning Braille different brain regions strengthen their connections at varied rates and time frames. A new study published in JNeurosci highlights the dynamic nature of learning-induced brain plasticity.

Learning new skills alters the brain’s white matter, the nerve fibers connecting brain regions. When people learn to read tactile Braille, their somatosensory and visual cortices reorganize to accommodate the new demands. Prior studies only examined white matter before and after training, so the exact time course of the changes was not known.

Molendowska and Matuszewski et al. used diffusion MRI to measure changes in the white matter strength of sighted adults as they learned Braille over the course of eight months. They took measurements at five time points: before the training, three times during, and once after. White matter in somatosensory areas strengthened steadily over the course of the training. But white matter in the visual cortex did not reorganize until halfway through the training, the point where the Braille words start to take on semantic meaning. White matter in both regions went back to the pre-training level two and a half months after the training ended. These results demonstrate white matter reorganizes itself across regions and different timeframes to meet the brain’s needs.

Journal/
conference:
JNeurosci
Organisation/s: Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland
Funder: The study was supported by National Science Centre Poland grants 2018/30/E/HS6/00206 and 2014/14/M/HS6/00918 awarded to AM. JM was additionally supported by National Science Centre Poland grant Preludium 2017/27/N/HS6/02669. The study was conducted with the aid of CePT research infrastructure purchased with funds from the European Regional Development Fund as part of the Innovative Economy Operational Programme, 2007–2013.
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