Improved auditory spatial sensitivity in near-sighted subjects

There is a great deal of anecdotal and empirical evidence in favor of compensatory plasticity of the sensorial modalities when one of them undergoes a total deficit. Yet, while most research has focused on the development of spatial hearing in totally blind individuals, there are few works dealing with auditory compensation in the case of a partial visual deprivation. In the present study, three experiments show that subjects undergoing a visual deficit like myopia are more accurate at localizing sounds than normal-sighted subjects.

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