Split-brain

向左走 向右走 3

Split-brain is a lay term to describe the result when the corpus callosum connecting the two hemispheres of the brain is severed to some degree. The surgical operation to produce this condition is called corpus callosotomy and is usually used as a last resort to treat otherwise intractable epilepsy. Initially, partial callosotomies are performed; if this operation does not succeed, a complete callosotomy is performed to mitigate the risk of accidental physical injury by reducing the severity and violence of epileptic seizures. Prior to callosotomies, epilepsy is treated through pharmaceutical means.

A patient with a split brain, when shown an image in his or her left visual field (the left half of what both eyes take in, see optic tract), will be unable to vocally name what he or she has seen. This is because the speech-control center is in the left side of the brain in most people, and the image from the left visual field is sent only to the right side of the brain (those with the speech control center in the right side will experience similar symptoms when an image is presented in the right visual field). Since communication between the two sides of the brain is inhibited, the patient cannot name what the right side of the brain is seeing. The person can, however, pick up and show recognition of an object (one within the left overall visual field) with their left hand, since that hand is controlled by the right side of the brain.

The same effect occurs for visual pairs and reasoning. For example, a patient with split brain is shown a picture of a chicken and a snowy field in separate visual fields and asked to choose from a list of words the best association with the pictures. The patient would choose a chicken foot to associate with the chicken and a shovel to associate with the snow; however, when asked to reason why the patient chose the shovel, the response would relate to the chicken (e.g. “the shovel is for cleaning out the chicken coop”).

— Wikipedia on Split-brain

2011.03.10 Thursday ACHK

向左走 向右走 2.3.2

又例如,如果在左邊視野放一本書,右邊視野放另一本的話,一位「分腦病人」可以同時閱讀兩本書。他的左右兩腦,可以各自為政,獨自運作,自己看自己的書。

再例如,有一位病人,與太太激烈爭辯時,他的右手(左腦)想打太太,幸好他的左手(右腦)極力阻止。

— Me@2011.03.10

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2011.03.10 Thursday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK

向左走 向右走 2.3.1

另一種情況是,有些病人患了極端嚴重的「癲癇症」。在沒有其他選擇的情況下,病人容許醫生為他們做手術,把連接左右腦,負責兩方互相溝通的「胼胝體」切除。例如,如果一個病人的「癲癇症」是來自「左腦失靈」的話,切除「胼胝體」可以中斷左右兩腦的訊息傳遞,從而避免那些「瘋狂」蔓延至右腦。

手術後,病人的「癲癇症」不會再發作。他們可以過幾乎完全正常的生活,甚至可以駕駛車輛。但是,卻有奇怪的現象,發生在他們的身上。

我剛才提過,左腦控制右半身,右腦控制左半身。例如,左腦會接收右邊視野的訊息,右腦則會接收左邊視野。左右兩腦不能溝通的話,即是左腦不會知道左邊視野有什麼,而右腦亦不知道右邊。科學家將物件放在病人的左邊視野,然後叫病人用右手把物件用文字寫出來,右手不能做到,因為左腦根本不知道左邊視野究竟有什麼,而左腦正正負責「右手」和「語言」。如果科學家改為叫病人用左手把看到的物件畫出來的話,病人可以輕易做到,因為右腦負責「左手」和「圖像」。

— Me@2011.03.09

2011.03.10 Thursday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK