Abstract

Visual cortices play a prominent role in the process of movement. It is essential to determine if traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI), which is a disorder that leads to sensorimotor dysfunction, results in structural and functional alterations of visual-related brain regions. Imaging studies have demonstrated such changes, but it is still largely unexplored. In this study, we compared resting state quantitative measures of areas involved in visual processing and perception between chronic SCI and uninjured healthy controls to reveal the impact of SCI in visual NeuroMatrix.

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