The document discusses split-brain syndrome, which can occur after split-brain surgery that severs the corpus callosum connecting the left and right hemispheres of the brain. Studies by Gazzaniga and Sperry found that split-brain patients had impaired communication between hemispheres, which could lead to a split personality with each hemisphere issuing conflicting demands. Their research with child participants found each hemisphere had its own desires and responses. In some cases, split-brain syndrome allows independent intellectual tasks between hemispheres, like Kim Peek who could read two pages of a book simultaneously and retain the information due to a complete split between hemispheres.
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Split Brain Theory
The document discusses split-brain syndrome, which can occur after split-brain surgery that severs the corpus callosum connecting the left and right hemispheres of the brain. Studies by Gazzaniga and Sperry found that split-brain patients had impaired communication between hemispheres, which could lead to a split personality with each hemisphere issuing conflicting demands. Their research with child participants found each hemisphere had its own desires and responses. In some cases, split-brain syndrome allows independent intellectual tasks between hemispheres, like Kim Peek who could read two pages of a book simultaneously and retain the information due to a complete split between hemispheres.
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Futalan, Ma. Tezza Keizel S.
29 July 2015
04-05:00 (MWF)
The Split Brain Theory
Split-brain surgery, or corpus calloscotomy, is a drastic way of alleviating epileptic seizures, the occurrence of sporadic electrical storms in the brain. The procedure involves severing the corpus callosum, the main bond between the brains left and right hemispheres. After a split-brain surgery the two hemispheres do not exchange information as efficiently as before. This impairment can result in split-brain syndrome, a condition where the separation of the hemispheres affects behavior and agency. Michael Gazzaniga and Roger W. Sperry, the first to study split brains in humans, found that several patients who had undergone a complete calloscotomy suffered from split-brain syndrome. In patients with split-brain syndrome the right hemisphere, which controls the left hand and foot, acts independently of the left hemisphere and the persons ability to make rational decisions. This can give rise to a kind of split personality, in which the left hemisphere give orders that reflect the persons rational goals, whereas the right hemisphere issues conflicting demands that reveal hidden desires. Gazzaniga and Sperry's split-brain research is now legendary. One of their child participants, Paul S, had a fully functional language center in both hemispheres. This allowed the researchers to question each side of the brain. When they asked the right side what their patient wanted to be when he grew up, he replied "an automobile racer." When they posed the same question to the left, however, he responded "a draftsman." Another patient pulled down his pants with the left hand and back up with the right in a continuing struggle. On a different occasion, this same patient's left hand made an attempt to strike the unsuspecting wife as the right hand grabbed the villainous limp to stop it. Split personality is a rare consequence of a split brain. In some cases, impaired interhemispheric communication leaves personality intact but still allows people to use the two hemispheres to complete independent intellectual tasks. An MRI scan of the savant, Kim Peek, revealed an absence of the corpus callosum, the anterior commissure and the hippocampal commissure, the three cables for information transfer between hemispheres. As a consequence of this complete split, Peek, who sadly died last year, was able to simultaneously read both pages of an open book and retain the information. He apparently had developed language areas in both hemispheres. Peek was a living encyclopedia. He spent every day with his dad in the library absorbing information. Among his most impressive feats was his ability to provide traveling directions between any two cities in the world.