It has been known for
decades that mental function can operate at a high level even though
large portions of a brain are destroyed. This was proven by the
memory experiments of Karl Lashley. Over
many years, Lashley did extensive research in which he tested how
memory and learning is affected when you take out various parts of an
animal's brain. Lashley tested using three types of mazes of varying
difficulty. Astonishingly, Lashley found that you could remove half
of a rat's brain, and it had very little effect on the rats ability
to remember either of the two simpler types of mazes.
Here
are some startling results listed by Lashley:
- Rats, trained to have a differential reaction to light, showed no reduction in accuracy of performance when the entire motor cortex of the brain, along with the frontal poles of the brain, was removed.
- Monkeys were trained to open various latch boxes. The entire motor areas of the monkeys' brains were removed. After 8 to 12 weeks of paralysis, during which they had no access to the latch boxes, the monkeys were then able to open the boxes “promptly” and “without random exploratory movements.”
- 13 rats were trained to solve mazes, and we read here "only one animal did not show evidence of the maze habit after removal of the frontal portions of the brain."
- Rats were trained to solve mazes, and the rats then had incisions made separating different parts of their brains. This produced no effect in memory retention.
- Monkeys were trained to unlatch latch boxes. After having their prefrontal cortex removed, there was “perfect retention of the manipulative habits.”
- Lashley
said, “A
number
of experiments with rats have shown that habits of visual
discrimination survive the destruction of any part of the cerebral
cortex except the primary visual projection area.”
Details
on these experiments can be found online in Karl Lashley's paper, “In
Search of the Engram,” and in the book here giving all of Lashley's main papers (a good that can be read online by registered users of www.archive.org).
Recently
there was published a superb scientific paper
describing cases of very high mental activity despite very great
brain damage.
Entitled
"Discrepancy Between Cerebral Structure and Cognitive
Functioning," the paper (authored by Nahm, Rousseau and Greyson,
two PhD's and an MD) will be read by some who are merely interested
in reading about weird curiosities. But a better way to read the
paper is to examine its examples and ask: is the standard “mind
from brain” dogma taught by neuroscientists (the dogma that minds
are generated by brains) consistent with these examples? Together the
examples seem to provide a very strong challenge to such a dogma.
On
page 1 we learn of a case reported by Martel in 1823 of a boy who
after age five lost all of his senses except hearing, and became
bed-confined. Until death he “seemed mentally unimpaired.” But
after he died, an autopsy was done which found that apart from
“residues of meninges" there was "no trace of a brain"
found inside the skull. How could the boy have seemed “mentally
unimpaired” with almost no brain?
The
paper then discusses a case examined by physician John Lorber, who
studied many patients with hydrocephalus, in which healthy brain
tissue is gradually replaced by a watery fluid. A mathematics student
with an IQ of 130 and a verbal IQ of 140 was found to have “virtually
no brain.” His vision was apparently perfect except for a
refraction error, even though he had no visual cortex (the part of
the brain involved in sight perception).
We
are told that of about 16 patients Lorber classified as having extreme
hydrocephalus (with 90% of the area inside the cranium replaced with
spinal fluid), half of them had an IQ of 100 or more. The article mentions 16 patients, but the number with extreme hydrocephalus was actually 60, as this article states, using information from this original source that mentions about 10 percent of a group of 600. So the actual number of these people with tiny brains and above-average intelligence was about 30. The article
states:
[Lorber]
described a woman with an extreme degree of hydrocephalus
showing “virtually no cerebral mantle” who had an IQ of 118, a
girl aged 5 who had an IQ of 123 despite extreme hydrocephalus, a
7-year-old boy with gross hydrocephalus and an IQ of 128, another
young adult with gross hydrocephalus and a verbal IQ of 144, and a
nurse and an English teacher who both led normal lives despite gross
hydrocephalus.
Lorber's
cases date from several decades ago, but more recent cases have been
reported of people with good mental functioning despite having almost
all of their brains replaced by a watery fluid due to hydrocephalus.
The scientific paper cites the cases below:
Another
interesting case is that of a 44-year-old woman with very
gross
hydrocephalus described by Masdeu (2008) and Masdeu et al.(2009). She
had a global IQ of 98, worked as an administrator for a government
agency, and spoke seven languages. In Leipzig, Germany, staff members
of the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
recorded a similar case. A man was examined because of his headache,
and to his physicians' surprise, he had an “incredibly large
hydrocephalus.” Villinger, the director of the Cognitive Neurology
Department, stated that this man had “almost no brain,” only “a
very thin layer of cortical tissue.” This man led an unremarkable
life, and his hydrocephalus was only discovered by chance (Hasler,
2016, p. 18)
The
paper informs us of cases of people who functioned well despite
losing half of their brains. We are told of a 36-year-old man whose
“intellect and language abilities were unimpaired” despite the
fact that the left hemisphere of his brain was “almost completely
lacking.” We are told of a boy who was an average student at a
regular school, even though he had a “nearly complete absence” of
the right hemisphere of his brain. The paper also cites cases
of people who had large portions of their brain missing, but who did
not notice any problem until they had seizures or headaches. The
paper states this:
For
example, Baudoin (1996) described the case of a 30-year-
old
woman who had a large lesion on her right cerebral hemisphere. The
right occipital and parietal lobes were entirely missing, as well as
the inferior part of the right temporal lobe. The brain lesion was
discovered only because of the patient's first seizures at the age of
30. Similarly, Duyff et al. (1996) presented the case of a
32-year-old lawyer whose brain showed a large arachnoid cyst in the
right frontotemporal region that had displaced (or replaced) the
temporal lobe and parts of the frontal and parietal lobes. His
development had been completely normal, and no abnormalities were
discovered upon neurological examination. His condition was
discovered only because he had a persistent headache after a skiing
accident in which he had fallen on his head.
Hemispherectomy
is a surgical procedure in which half of the brain is removed. I knew
that the procedure can be performed on young children suffering from
seizures, with surprisingly little negative impact. But the paper
also tells us on page 3 that “Although
most hemispherectomies are performed on young children, adults are
also operated on with remarkable success.”
Schematic diagram of a hemispherectomy
Very
interestingly, we are told that when half of their brains are removed
in these operations, “most patients, even adults, do not
seem to lose their long-term memory such as episodic (autobiographic)
memories.” The paper tells us that
Dandy, Bell and Karnosh “stated
that their patient's memory seemed unimpaired after hemispherectomy,”
the removal of half of their brains. We are also told that Vining and
others “were surprised by the apparent retention of memory after
the removal of the left or the right hemisphere of their patients.”
The paper then tells
the case of Kim Peek, an autistic savant who had no corpus callosum
(the “bridge” connecting the two brain hemispheres). Much of
Peek's brain consisted of empty areas filled with cerebrospinal
fluid. But still “he memorized more than 12,000 books, apparently
verbatim.”
On page 59 of the book The Biological Mind, the author states the following:
A group of surgeons at Johns Hopkins Medical School performed fifty-eight hemispherectomy operations on children over a thirty-year period. "We were awed," they wrote later of their experiences, "by the apparent retention of memory after removal of half of the brain, either half, and by the retention of the child's personality and sense of humor."
In the paper "Neurocognitive outcome after pediatric epilepsy surgery" by Elisabeth M. S. Sherman, we have some discussion of the effects on children of temporal lobectomy (removal of the temporal lobe of the brain) and hemispherectomy, surgically removing half of their brains to stop seizures. We are told this:
After temporal lobectomy, children show few changes in verbal or nonverbal intelligence....Cognitive levels in many children do not appear to be altered significantly by hemispherectomy. Several researchers have also noted increases in the intellectual functioning of some children following this procedure....Explanations for the lack of decline in intellectual function following hemispherectomy have not been well elucidated.
Referring to a study by Gilliam, the paper states that of 21 children who had parts of their brains removed to treat epilepsy, including 10 who had surgery to remove part of the frontal lobe, "none of the patients with extra-temporal resections had reductions in IQ post-operatively," and that two of the children with frontal lobe resections had "an increase in IQ greater than 10 points following surgery."
The paper here gives precise before and after IQ scores for more than 50 children who had half of their brains removed in a hemispherectomy operation in the United States. For one set of 31 patients, the IQ went down by an average of only 5 points. For another set of 15 patients, the IQ went down less than 1 point. For another set of 7 patients the IQ went up by 6 points.
The paper here (in Figure 4) describes IQ outcomes for 41 children who had half of their brains removed in hemispherectomy operations in Freiburg, Germany. For the vast majority of children, the IQ was about the same after the operation. The number of children who had increased IQs after the operation was greater than the number who had decreased IQs.
At this URL
there was recently published a case of a man with a 9-centimeter (3
inch) wide "air-filled cavity" in the right frontal lobe of
his brain.
Although
the paper is entitled "The man that lost (part of) his mind,"
the paper indicates no sign of mental damage:
An 84-year-old man was referred to the emergency department by his general practitioner having been complaining of recurrent falls and feeling unsteady over several months. He then developed a 3-day history of left-sided arm and leg weakness. There was no confusion, facial weakness, visual or speech disturbance, and he was feeling otherwise well.
The man showed good judgment in declining a risky operation that wasn't vitally necessary. But how could someone have so little damage from a giant hole in a part of the brain that supposedly is involved in language, memory, and judgment? Cases like these are inconsistent with dogmas about minds being generated by brains.
An 84-year-old man was referred to the emergency department by his general practitioner having been complaining of recurrent falls and feeling unsteady over several months. He then developed a 3-day history of left-sided arm and leg weakness. There was no confusion, facial weakness, visual or speech disturbance, and he was feeling otherwise well.
The man showed good judgment in declining a risky operation that wasn't vitally necessary. But how could someone have so little damage from a giant hole in a part of the brain that supposedly is involved in language, memory, and judgment? Cases like these are inconsistent with dogmas about minds being generated by brains.
Now
for another similar anomaly that is even more amazing. This is a case
in which a human managed to function well in society as a French
civil servant, even though he
had almost no functional brain. The
case is discussed here in a story entitled “Man lives normal life
with abnormal brain”:
Inside
a normal brain are tiny structures called lateral ventricles that
hold brain fluid. In this man's case, the ventricles had swollen up
like balloons, until they filled almost all of the man's brain. When
the 44-year-old man was a child, doctor's had noticed the swelling,
and had tried to treat it. Apparently the swelling had progressed
since childhood. The man was left with what the Reuters story calls
“little more than a sheet of actual brain tissue.”
But
this same man, with almost no functioning brain, had been working as
a French civil servant, and had his IQ tested to be 75, higher than
that of a mentally retarded person. The Reuters story says: “A man
with an unusually tiny brain managed to live an entirely normal life
despite his condition, caused by a fluid buildup in his skull.” The
case was written up in the British medical journal The
Lancet
in a paper entitled “Brain of a white-collar worker.”
In a later "ScienceAlert" story on this case, a cognitive psychologist states, "Any theory of consciousness has to be able to explain why a person like that, who's missing 90 percent of his neurons, still exhibits normal behavior."
In a later "ScienceAlert" story on this case, a cognitive psychologist states, "Any theory of consciousness has to be able to explain why a person like that, who's missing 90 percent of his neurons, still exhibits normal behavior."
90 percent of his neurons lost, and normal behavior -- that's radically inconsistent with the "brains make minds" dogma.
In the medical paper
“Revisiting Hydrocephalus as a Model to Study Brain Resilience”
by de Oliviera and Pinto, we are shown a photo of a patient with
almost no brain, because he had hydrocephalus that has replaced
almost all of his brain tissue with a watery fluid. But the patient
is described in the paper as “normal,” and is contrasted with
another patient with a similar condition who had cognitive problems.
Apparently this “normal” patient suffered few cognitive effects
from having lost almost all of his brain. The paper is at the URL
here.
At
the URL here
you can find a book chapter entitled, “Memory
consolidation,
retrograde amnesia, and the temporal lobe.” Tables 4 and 5 of this
paper give us detailed information on 16 cases of severe brain damage
documented in the medical literature. The patients had damage in
between three and ten different parts of their brain, with an average
of about four or five different brain areas being damaged. The tables
give IQ scores for these 16 patients, and the average score was 99 –
just one point less than 100, the average IQ. But how could their
average intelligence be so normal, if they had such heavy brain
damage?
As discussed here,
years ago a man named Pat Martino had an operation in which 70
percent of his left temporal lobe was removed. But today he plays
virtuoso jazz guitar flawlessly, and you can see his impressive
performances and instructional guitar videos on youtube.com, made
after his operation. You would never guess there was any problem in
his brain.
In his essay
“A Map of the Soul,” neuroscientist Michael Egnor states the
following:
I have scores of
patients who are missing large areas of their brains, yet who have
quite good minds. I have a patient born with two-thirds of her brain
absent. She’s a normal junior high kid who loves to play soccer.
Another patient, missing a similar amount of brain tissue, is an
accomplished musician with a master’s degree in English.
The same author tells us here that the patient with two-thirds of her brain absent made the honor roll at school. The paper "Neuropsychological and neurophysiological evaluation of cognitive deficits related to the severity of traumatic brain injury" studied the IQ of 90 patients, dividing them into three categories: mild traumatic brain injury, moderate traumatic brain injury, and severe traumatic brain injury. The mean IQ in each of these groups was about the same, being either 103 or 104. We read that "a surprising finding was that specific intelligence subtests did not show [sensitvity] even for differentiation between severe and mild injury." Such a result is surprising only to those who think your brain makes your mind, not those who reject such an idea.
The same author tells us here that the patient with two-thirds of her brain absent made the honor roll at school. The paper "Neuropsychological and neurophysiological evaluation of cognitive deficits related to the severity of traumatic brain injury" studied the IQ of 90 patients, dividing them into three categories: mild traumatic brain injury, moderate traumatic brain injury, and severe traumatic brain injury. The mean IQ in each of these groups was about the same, being either 103 or 104. We read that "a surprising finding was that specific intelligence subtests did not show [sensitvity] even for differentiation between severe and mild injury." Such a result is surprising only to those who think your brain makes your mind, not those who reject such an idea.
It is often claimed that certain mental capabilities such as intelligence come from a part of the brain called the prefrontal cortex. But the
authors of a scientific paper say “we have studied
numerous patients with bilateral lesions of the ventromedial
prefrontal (VM) cortex” and that “most of these patients retain
normal intellect, memory and problem-solving ability in laboratory
settings.” On page 342 of the book Developmental Neuropsychology we read the following about brain surgery on children: "Removal of benign astrocytic and oligodendrocytic tumors in one of the cortical hemispheres had little effect on personality and intelligence; 72 percent of 42 consecutive cases had no problems in school on follow-up (Hirsch et al. 1989)."
Such cases are powerful evidence against the dogma that our minds are merely a product of our brains. Repeated countless times in mainstream literature, but never proven, such a dogma is also discredited by both the inability of neuroscience to plausibly account for consciousness and very-long-term human memory, and the inability of a "mind from brain" dogma to account for psychic phenomena such as ESP, remote viewing, and near-death experiences. Nature never told us that minds come from brains. It was merely neuroscientists who told us that, without having sufficient evidence to support such a claim. Don't confuse such ideologically-motivated scientist speech customs with facts.
Alternatives to the "mind from brain" dogma include the idea of a human soul and the idea that human consciousness may have some mysterious consciousness infrastructure as its source, possibly something cosmic in scope. When asked "Where do your smartphone games come from," a child may answer with great certainty, "From the smartphone, of course." But such games may actually come from some mysterious information infrastructure involving the Internet and remote servers, something the child knows nothing about. Similarly, our minds may have as their main source some mysterious non-biological consciousness infrastructure we know nothing about.
In this post I have merely listed some of the very many cases showing high mental function despite large brain damage. See this post for many more such cases.
Such cases are powerful evidence against the dogma that our minds are merely a product of our brains. Repeated countless times in mainstream literature, but never proven, such a dogma is also discredited by both the inability of neuroscience to plausibly account for consciousness and very-long-term human memory, and the inability of a "mind from brain" dogma to account for psychic phenomena such as ESP, remote viewing, and near-death experiences. Nature never told us that minds come from brains. It was merely neuroscientists who told us that, without having sufficient evidence to support such a claim. Don't confuse such ideologically-motivated scientist speech customs with facts.
Alternatives to the "mind from brain" dogma include the idea of a human soul and the idea that human consciousness may have some mysterious consciousness infrastructure as its source, possibly something cosmic in scope. When asked "Where do your smartphone games come from," a child may answer with great certainty, "From the smartphone, of course." But such games may actually come from some mysterious information infrastructure involving the Internet and remote servers, something the child knows nothing about. Similarly, our minds may have as their main source some mysterious non-biological consciousness infrastructure we know nothing about.
In this post I have merely listed some of the very many cases showing high mental function despite large brain damage. See this post for many more such cases.
Postscript: In the paper "Does brain tumor histology influence cognitive function?" Anne E. Kayl and Christina A. Meyers give us a study of dozens of patients who had very severe brain tumors. Noting a lack of any relation between the size of the brain tumors and mental function (contrary to what you would expect from "brains make minds" dogma), they state this:
"Statistical analyses failed to detect a significant effect of tumor histology or tumor volume on intellectual, memory, language, executive, or motor function. In fact, regression and correlation analyses suggest that patient age is of greater importance than tumor histology or tumor volume for determining neuropsychological test performance. Tumor volume was neither predictive of, nor reliably associated with cognitive performance in this patient sample. While these results affirm age as a marker for a worsened prognosis for the more advanced forms of anaplastic glioma, the statistically nonsignificant relationship of tumor volume to cognitive function was unexpected."
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