Melissa Saenz Melissa Saenz, Ph.D.
Postdoctoral Fellow in Biology, Koch Lab
Lecturer in Computation & Neural Systems

saenz@caltech.edu
office: (626)395-8964

Caltech, MC 216-76
Pasadena CA 91125


New Caltech Course on Brain Plasticity
I am pleased to teach BI/CNS 286. [course website].


New Study on Sight Recovery after Blindness
Using functional MRI, we studied brain reorganization in two rare individuals who had been blind since early childhood and whose vision was partially restored as adults in their 40's. In their visual cortex, a region called MT+ that normally responds to visual motion responded to both visual and sound motion. This suggests that the encroachement of sound processing into this visual brain region during blindness (cross-modal plasticity) wasn't random, but took advantage of MT+'s specialization for motion processing. It also tells us that sound responses persisted alongside regained visual responses even many years after sight was restored.

Saenz, Lewis, Huth, Fine, Koch (2008) Visual Area MT+ Responds to Auditory Motion in Human Sight-Recovery Subjects. Journal of Neuroscience. [pdf]

Nature News coverage: "Re-wired for Sight and Sound"
See also: Science News, New Scientist, Caltech Press Release

A competitive blind soccer player tracks the sound of a moving, ringing ball.

The Sound of Change: Auditory synesthesia
We discovered an unusual sensory experience in otherwise normal people who hear sounds when they see visual flashes or visual motion. This demonstrates a previously undescribed form of synesthesia, a benign neurological condition involving cross-activation of the senses. As objective evidence, "hearing-motion synesthetes" performed much better than control subjects at identifying rhthymic patterns of flashes that were similar to visual Morse code. Synesthetes had an advantage because they not only saw, but also heard the visual patterns. Hearing-motion synesthesia could be a useful tool for studying how the auditory and visual processing systems interact in the brain.

It was not difficult to find people with hearing-motion synesthesia once we knew what to ask! The sound perceptions are simple in nature (such as beeping, tapping, whirring) and non-linguistic.

Saenz and Koch (2008) The Sound of Change: Visually-induced auditory synesthesia. Current Biology. In Press.

Some people hear a sound when viewing this movie. Do you?
(Click for movie)

"Global" Visual Attention
More visual information reaches our eyes than our brains can fully process. As William James wrote "My experience is what I agree to attend to. Only those items which I notice shape my mind - without selective interest, experience is utter chaos." (Principles of Psychology, 1890). My experiments tested the hypothesis that attention to certain basic visual features (e.g. color, motion direction) modulates neuronal responses throughout the visual scene. For example, when an observer searches a shelf for a red book, attention would sensitize neurons tuned to the color red with receptive field locations throughout the visual field. This idea stresses that the neuronal facilitation is spatially global and not restricted to a local region of focus. A global mechanism could be useful to the visual system because the location of relevent visual items is not always known in advance.

Saenz, Buracas, & Boynton (2002) Global effects of feature-based attention in human visual cortex. Nature Neuroscience. [pdf]

Saenz, Buracas & Boynton (2003) Global feature-based attention for motion and color. Vision Research. [pdf]


How the human brain responds to seeing motion

A movie demo of functional MRI responses.





last updated 5/15/08