French doctors are amazed that a 44-year-old civil servant with an abnormally small brain has led a normal life with a slightly lower than normal IQ, according to a report on Physorg.com.
craazzyyy stuff hereeeee XD
French doctors are amazed that a 44-year-old civil servant with an abnormally small brain has led a normal life with a slightly lower than normal IQ, according to a report on Physorg.com.
ShiroiHikari (post: 1220042) wrote:Holy crap. How is that possible? D:
Is it true that we only use 10% of our brains then? XD
He's a civil servant. It probably helps. Actually, though, I doubt it's all that big a deal. I wonder how well he can see though, since my understanding is a large portion of hte brain is dedicated to interpreting vision. Even then, I don't know how much of it is.ShiroiHikari (post: 1220042) wrote:Holy crap. How is that possible? D:
termyt (post: 1220118) wrote: I wonder how well he can see though, since my understanding is a large portion of hte brain is dedicated to interpreting vision. Even then, I don't know how much of it is.
Technomancer (post: 1220049) wrote:The brain itself is fairly plastic, and can adapt to at least some forms of damage. More importantly, the part of the brain that is responsible for all of our higher processes (the cerebral cortex) is itself only a thin layer on the outer edge of the rest of the brain. That region seems to have been mostly preserved in this individual. A combination of displacement and subsuming of function would account for the rest. The distributed nature of neural processing would also improve the robustness to damage
However, this does not mean that we only use ~10% of our brains. We would certainly not have evolved such a large and energy intensive organ if that were the case! I'm not really sure where this notion originated, but it may have something to do with the fact that all of the brain isn't active at the same time (leaving aside the random neural activity that is always occuring).
mysngoeshere56 (post: 1221154) wrote:Wow, this is pretty interesting. I've heard that we can live without most of our brain, but I never really thought about it until now.
Wow.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 370 guests