Re-MAPMATH aimed to uncover brain plasticity for numerical functions. We initially focused on plasticity occurring as a consequence of the growth of a brain tumor (mostly low-grade glioma – LGG). As a consequence of the slow growth of LLGs, the brain has time to reorganize so that behavior is majorly unaffected [1,2].
While brain reorganization has been mostly studied for the language domain [3,4], our project focused on the mathematical system: from core math functions to calculation. Our overarching goal was to delineate possible redundancies and alternative configurations existent in the mathematical brain, allowing for efficient numerical behavior. For that, we used neuroimaging methods (magnetoencephalography - MEG, structural, and diffusion MRI) to these neural changes, including the contrast to the healthy population.
Specific objectives implied firstly, group studies, where default brain activations and functional connectivity in healthy populations were described. They also involved mapping the brain basis for the same functions in brain-damaged patients (brain tumors) and a track of the behavior and its brain basis for post-surgically. Finally, and overall, we aimed to contrast the reorganized brain system to the normative one.
The information obtained from this action will be valuable for rehabilitation techniques in developmental disorders or brain injury and the well-being of the patients. A good understanding of the reorganization capacities of the numerical system at the group and the single case level should benefit the future patient quality of life when numerical brain areas were affected. In turn, we targeted a deep understanding of the functional complexity inside the neurocognitive math system.
[1] Desmurget, M., Bonnetblanc, F. & Duffau, H. Brain 130, 898–914 (2006).
[2] Duffau, H. In Cognitive Plasticity in Neurologic Disorders (eds. Tracy, J., Hampstead, B. & Sathian, K.) 125 (Oxford University Press. 2015).
[3] Duffau, H. et al. J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry 74, 901–907 (2003).
[4] Sarubbo, S., Le Bars, E., Moritz-Gasser, S. & Duffau, H. Neurosurg. Rev. 35, 287–292 (2012).