Home » Psychology news » Seeing sound: Nonsighted people could acquire a new sensory functionality similar to vision
Seeing sound: Nonsighted people could acquire a new sensory functionality similar to vision
October 27, 2015 by NewsBot
Intrinsic neural connections -- called crossmodal mappings -- can be used by assistive devices to help the blind detect their environment without requiring intense concentration or hundreds of hours of training. This new multisensory perspective on such aids (called sensory substitution devices) could make tasks that were previously attention-consuming much easier, allowing nonsighted people to acquire a new sensory functionality similar to vision.