Many
of the results are quite similar to those of hemispherectomy. This
rationalization is still inadequate when you take into account how a brain
surgery is performed. Surgeon has to remove the infected area and some
surrounding health tissue, sometimes a much larger tissue than the infected
area, to make sure infection does not spread. If the information stored in the
infected areas is reproduced somewhere in the brain before surgical procedure,
some information is still lost when surrounding health brain tissue is removed,
consequently the memory would suffer. This is not observed after the surgery.
So it is necessary to assume that the memory stored in the neighboring health
tissue is also replicated in other parts of the brain. This raises a question:
how does the brain know how much health tissue is going to be taken out? If the
brain does not know, surgeries will inevitable destruct part of the memory. The
belief that memory is stored in the brain (in neurons or in the network of
neurons) apparently contradicts with findings in brain surgeries. In the 1920s
Karl Lashley conducted a series of experiments trying to identify which part of
the brain memories are stored. He trained rats to find their way through a
maze, and then made lesions in different parts of the cerebral cortex in an
attempt to erase its original memory trace. His experimental animals were still
able to find their way through the maze no matter where he put lesions on their
brains.
He therefore concluded that memories are not stored in Nooflex any single area
of the brain, but are instead distributed throughout it. Distributing the
memory of every single event over the whole brain is energetically inefficient
and mathematically impossible. If his reasoning is not confined to the brain,
the logical conclusion should be that memory is not stored in the brain.
Instincts are obviously inherited and nobody has any slight idea where the
information making up the instincts is stored, and cognitive memory is thought
to be acquired through experience and stored by changing the signal chemicals
in the neurons in the brain. New research reveals that even cognitive memory
can be inherited. A study by Larry Feig at Tufts University School of Medicine
in Boston indicates that mother mice that receive mental training before they
become pregnant can pass on their cognitive benefits to their young even there
is no direct contact among the mothers and their offspring. It is obvious that
the cognitive memory is not acquired by the young through experience, and there
is no apparent way for the young to store the information in their neurons,
then where do the young retrieve the memory from? Maybe from where they store
their instincts information, a place nobody knows yet. "Brain areas such
as the hippocampus, the amygdala, the striatum, or the mammillary bodies are
thought to be involved in specific types of memory. For example, the
hippocampus is believed to be involved in spatial learning and declarative
learning, while the amygdala is thought to be involved in emotional memory.
Damage to certain areas in patients and animal models and subsequent memory
deficits is a primary source of information. However, rather than implicating a
specific area, it could be that damage to a pathway traveling through the area
is actually responsible for the observed deficit". If one stores all his
possessions in a warehouse connected to his house through a highway, he would
not be able to get anything from the warehouse if the highway is broken down.
To infer that everything is stored on the highway based on the facts he can not
get anything when the highway is interrupted is ridiculous. Even the connection
between the brain and memory is well established, it is beyond logic to
conclude that memory reside inside the brain. Wilder Penfield was a pioneer in
associating particular type of memory with specific area in the brain. When he
was conducting surgeries to remove specific types of temporal lobe loci which
were causing epilepsy, he made ground-breaking discoveries by taking notice
that his un-anesthetized patients (with local pain blockers) could listen and
respond to his questions while their temporal lobe was being operated upon.
Indeed, the verbal feedback by the patient was an essential requirement so that
Penfield could determine that he was excising exact portion of the brain which
was the cause of the neurological symptoms being treated. He would insert an
electrode into patient's brain and provide electrical stimulation to see how
the patient responds.
One of Penfield's patients heard a specific music
selection being performed by an orchestra "when a point on the superior
surface of the right temporal lobe was stimulated after removal of the anterior
half of the lobe." The sound was so clear that the patient believed that
there was a phonograph in the operating room. As the same point was
re-stimulated (without withdrawing the electrode, only stop and re-supply
electrical stimulus) the music began at the same spot in time where it had
previously begun. When Penfield withheld the electrode, the patient heard
nothing. He found that the patient could not guess what was to happen after the
electrode had been withdrawn. "L.G. saw a man fighting. When the point was
re-stimulated he saw a man and a dog walking along a road." Often the memory
is no longer able to be recalled. At the beginning of his career in brain
surgery, Penfield reasoned memory must be stored somewhere in the brain and the
stimulus opened the gate of river of memory. His work originated numerous
researches to associate memory and emotion to specific area in the brain.
Penfield's continuous research convinced him that memory can not exist in the
brain. He and his colleague reported that removing more cortex after injury to
the brain raised the Intelligence Quotient. In one case, he was surprised to
find out that his patient's Intelligence Quotient went from 75 to 80 - 95 after
he made extensive bilateral removal of the prefrontal lobes. William Cone
reported similar result after removing part of his patient's brain. Penfield's
continued work, especially on hippocampus and cortex, had changed his views on
brain, consciousness and memory mechanism.
He late suggested that the
interpretive cortex of the temporal lobes acts as a bridge, and the hippocampus
holds "keys of access" to those past recorded experiences which are
located somewhere outside of the brain. Philosopher William James had a
technically different but very similar view on consciousness as Penfield. He
held that consciousness operates through the brain rather than the brain producing
consciousness. The notion that consciousness is separated from the body has a
long tradition in the west thinkers. Plato portrayed the earthly body as a
limiting factor on conscious experience. Kant insinuated the body as "an
imposition to our pure spiritual life". The idea matured into a
proposition called Transmission Hypothesis --- brain and body serve not as the
originators of consciousness but rather as its trans-receiver. The cited
supporting evidences for this hypothesis are mostly in the typically considered
unscientific fields, such as, psychedelic research, psi effect, after death
experience, etc.. As a result this hypothesis is ill received within the
philosophic and scientific community. But that does not mean they are wrong, to
separate consciousness from body might a very sensible thing to do in the light
of above facts. Since memory does not reside inside the brain, the functions of
the brain need to be reinvestigated. It is possible that the brain acts as a
bridge to consciousness as suggested by Penfield, or a trans-receiver suggested
by William James.
The similarity between the two is obvious, and the brain is
the only pathway to consciousness and memory for both cases. The importance of
brain to memory has been supported by a vast number of critical researches over
a long history. But the evidence to suggest that the brain is the only organ
associated with memory is lacking, on the contrary, some evidences suggest that
the heart might be associated with memory too. Does the heart have memory? The
question has been around for years. The question arises anew after years of
transplanting the heart or other organs into human beings and noticing some
changes in the recipients. After having had heart transplants some recipients
have noticed profound changes in their personalities. For some, there is an
overwhelming need to consume quantities of Mexican foods when that type of
cuisine was never a favorite. For others, a sudden love for football, when
sports were previously hated, comes into play. How can these phenomena be
explained? Can the heart actually feel, think, and remember? The answer could
shed light on how memory is handled by human. Rollin MacCraty from California's
Hearthmath University has devised tests which show how the heart processes
information. His tests showed that the heart responded before the brain when
encountering an emotional event. He concluded the heart must have the ability
to process emotional data. To associate heart with memory is a legitimate
proposition based on these findings.
But there is no medical evidence
indicating that changing the heart to a mechanical heart leads to memory loss.
This implies memory is not stored in the heart. Could it be because that heart
does not store memory but is a gateway to the memory? What kind of memory can
be accessed through heart? Are other organs gateways to limited memory too?
These questions ask for expanding memory research to a much wider ground
besides the brain. The inevitable question is, if memory is not inside the brain,
where does memory reside? The short answer is: we don't know. Scientific
pursuit has always been looking for evidence to support a logic conclusion
derived from a general theory. If the general theory is fundamentally flawed,
the progressing of science will stop and wait for convincing evidence to
overturn the general theory. Only from there, science will flourish again on
the new foundation. Materialism has been very successful for the advancement of
living standard and scientific queries. Recent research in quantum mechanics
suggests reality in a more basic level might not be materialism at all.
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