Common patterns of cerebral activation in two groups of deaf
people using two different signed languages, ASL and LSQ, and in two
groups of hearing controls, including hearing persons viewing printed
nouns in English that were semantically identical to the nouns
presented in ASL (hearing 1), and hearing persons viewing printed nouns
in English that were semantically identical to the nouns presented in
LSQ (hearing 2). (I) Averaged PET subtraction images are
shown superimposed on the averaged MRI scans for the verb generation
(condition v)–visual fixation (condition
i) comparison in each of the four groups of deaf and
hearing Ss. Focal changes in rCBF are shown as a
t-statistic image, values for which are coded by the
color scale. Each of the saggital slices taken through the left
hemisphere illustrate the areas of increased rCBF in the LIFC (white
arrow), which were common across all four groups. Also visible are
regions of posterior activity corresponding to extrastriate visual
areas that are different in deaf and hearing because of the different
visual stimuli used (moving hand signs vs. static printed text).
(II) PET/MRI data for the pooled comparison including
all conditions in which signs or linguistically organized nonsigns were
presented compared with baseline, averaged across all 11 deaf Ss (see
Table 2). The saggital, coronal, and horizontal images show the area of
significant rCBF increase located within the STG in each hemisphere.
Also visible are areas of increased activity in striate and
extrastriate visual cortex. Left side of images correspond to left side
of brain.