# Reduced functional connectivity between central representations of V1 and foveal-biased face-selective region in central vision loss

**Authors:** Holly D. H. Brown, Richard J. W. Vernon, Heidi A. Baseler, Antony B. Morland

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s00429-025-02973-x · Brain Structure & Function · 2025-07-03

## TL;DR

People with central vision loss show reduced brain connectivity in areas responsible for face processing, suggesting changes in how the brain processes visual information.

## Contribution

This study demonstrates reduced functional connectivity in foveal-biased face-selective regions in individuals with central vision loss using resting state fMRI.

## Key findings

- Central vision loss leads to reduced functional connectivity between foveal-biased V1 and face-selective areas.
- The connectivity differences were only significant in the right hemisphere, supporting lateralization of face processing.
- Functional connectivity changes were not influenced by eye state or fixation.

## Abstract

Individuals with central visual deficits exhibit atrophy of the visual cortex in regions representing the central visual field and show little or no functional response there. Information in the central and peripheral visual field appear to be represented preferentially in extrastriate regions that are selective to faces and places, respectively. We recruited individuals with bilateral macular degeneration (age-related or juvenile) and age-matched sighted controls. We used resting state fMRI (RS-fMRI) to examine functional connectivity between striate (V1) and extrastriate face and place selective areas as it allows better comparison between those with unaffected vision and those with visual loss, whose stimulus related signals are already known to differ from those of controls. Selective deficits emerged in our central loss group, showing reduced functional connectivity between regions with foveal biases (central V1-face area) compared to sighted controls, whereas no such difference emerged in the peripheral biased regions (peripheral V1-place area). This result was evident regardless of whether eyes were closed or open and fixating, but was only significant in the right hemisphere, supporting the functional lateralisation of face processing. This pilot study provides some evidence for reduced functional connectivity between foveal-biased visual areas in central vision loss, suggesting that communication within the posterior visual pathway may be selectively affected in partial vision loss. Functional connectivity differences did not appear to be driven by changes in viewing condition. RS-fMRI is a valuable tool that allows us to explore functional brain changes without the need for retinal input.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** macular degeneration (MONDO:0003004)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** atrophy of the visual cortex (MESH:D014786), macular degeneration (MESH:D008268)

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12226640/full.md

## References

13 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12226640/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12226640