Elsevier

NeuroImage

Volume 215, 15 July 2020, 116822
NeuroImage

Triple visual hemifield maps in a case of optic chiasm hypoplasia

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.116822Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • DWI confirms asymmetric optic nerve projection in a patient with chiasma hypoplasia.

  • pRF mapping reveals superposition of 3 hemifield representations in left hemisphere.

  • Triple maps highlight scope of plasticity in congenital visual system abnormalities.

Abstract

In humans, each hemisphere comprises an overlay of two visuotopic maps of the contralateral visual field, one from each eye. Is the capacity of the visual cortex limited to these two maps or are plastic mechanisms available to host more maps? We determined the cortical organization of the visual field maps in a rare individual with chiasma hypoplasia, where visual cortex plasticity is challenged to accommodate three hemifield maps. Using high-resolution fMRI at 7T and diffusion-weighted MRI at 3T, we found three hemiretinal inputs, instead of the normal two, to converge onto the left hemisphere. fMRI-based population receptive field mapping of the left V1–V3 at 3T revealed three superimposed hemifield representations in the left visual cortex, i.e. two representations of opposing visual hemifields from the left eye and one right hemifield representation from the right eye. We conclude that developmental plasticity including the re-wiring of local intra- and cortico-cortical connections is pivotal to support the coexistence and functioning of three hemifield maps within one hemisphere.

Keywords

DWI
fMRI
Optic chiasm
Plasticity
Retinotopy
Visual cortex

Cited by (0)

1

These authors contributed equally.