1.1 An Early Brain Map
1.1 An Early Brain Map
A NEW THEORY
Dr. Gall believed that the brain was the source of human behavior. He thought it was
possible to understand human behavior if we understood how the brain functioned. He
believed that each area of the brain was linked to a certain behavior, such as bravery.
Furthermore, Dr. Gall wondered if the functions of the brain created bumps on a person's skull
(the skull is the bone around a person's head). If so, a doctor could learn about a person's
behavior by analyzing these bumps. He could analyze the location and size of the bumps on
the skull. The bumps would tell the doctor about the person's behavior.
Dr. Gall began to test this idea. First, he looked at the heads of many people. He located
the bumps on their skulls. He measured these bumps. Then he asked the people questions
about themselves. He wanted to learn about their behavior. He looked for a link between
people's bumps and their behavior. Finally, Dr. Gall thought he could link every bump on a
human skull to a certain brain function. He created a complex map of an average human head.
The map had 27 areas. He labeled each of the areas with a brain function. Some of these
functions were friendship, music, numbers, a love of children, bravery, humor, and memory.
Dr. Gall named this mapping of the human skull "phrenology."
PHRENOLOGY'S CRITICS
In contrast, other people made jokes about phrenology and head bumps. They laughed
at Dr. Gall and his ideas. They did not think phrenology was scientific. They said it was
impossible to know a person's personality by analyzing head bumps.
In the early 20th century, the study of human behavior became important to scientists.
They learned that head bumps could not explain how people behaved. They looked for other
explanations. Soon everyone agreed that phrenology was not a science after all. It was only
one man's attempt to understand human behavior.