was twenty seven, he was sent to one of the founders of the Department of Neurosurgery, Mr. Scoville. He was sent here because he was completely unresponsive to his anti-convulsant drugs that he was given. H.M was going to get surgery done on his brain at the Hartford Hospital. Scoville had been experimenting with this surgery for treating psychosis. Scoville then performed an experimental surgical procedure on H.M. which was called a bilateral medial temporal lobe resection. This procedure involved removing big parts of the temporal lobe from both brain hemispheres. The amygdala and about two thirds of the hippocampus was removed (Costandi, 2007). In my opinion, I do not think that this procedure should have been done until preliminary experiments had been done before to make sure that that there were no negative outcomes from this…
"The head told the heart to get back in its box and get on with business"p.25…
- Deckard & Rachael, 20:35. Conversation as part of Voight-Kampff test, shows limitations of artificial emotional response…
Congratulations, you just performed a Prefrontal Lobotomy, which is a practice a little more common than most would like to admit but, it is only one of the many horrendous tortures that awaited patients who were committed to mental asylums in the 19th, 20th, and early 21st centuries…
Life relies heavily on the choices made every day. One small mistake in deciding something can trigger something totally unexpected or threatening. In Edward Bloor’s novel,…
Damage to the frontal lobe due to an accident. It is unknown if Ehrlich Cocker beat or molested his son, from what…
The first closed-ended question I have is: Does decision making related to psychology? The answer is definitely yes. Because in the first video David Redish said that : “Whether you are talking about neuroscience, psychology, or behavior economic, or robotics, they all come up with the same type of decision”. David Redish has studied the dynamic of brain and behavior, he has also published a book, he know this adequately. In my opinion, decision making is closed linked with brain and psychology, every behavior or decision that human made in daily life is strongly connected with our cerebrum.…
Central Nervous System depressants are used by millions to help treat people with sleep disorders and anxiety. Taking CNS depressants for a couple of days to a few weeks may help you feel relaxed and drowsy. After a long period of time you may need larger doses to get the same feeling of calmness and relaxed. Using CNS depressants with alcohol can slow your heart rate down and cause a dramatic decrease in your breathing and cause death. Taking CNS depressants over a long term period and suddenly stopping can have life-threatening results such as withdrawal seizures and even death.…
Getting all the associations for a face without that gut feeling of familiarity. Pushed to a choice, cortex has to defer to amygdala"; "So it's not what you think you feel that wins out, it's what you feel you think," (P.131, The Echo Maker). Again another one of the few accurate statements I have observed in fictional Psych. media representations. Lastly, Schluter is asked “Tell me a little bit more about her. [Karin] Her character.' (P.119, The Echo Maker). His answer is minimal, yet someone who is, “ apparent that… had significant clinical findings in addition to the delusion that her close family members were replaced by impostors.” (P.372, The Echo Maker) How would they be able to identify distinct mental and moral qualities to an individual. Although, this potential fallacy is minimal, it still shows the potential for…
Fear can cause others to be paralysed emotionally if they are unable to make a decision and deal with it. They wouldn’t be able to open up and express their emotions putting more pressure on themselves, making them feel paralysed, disconnected and numb from over time. Nick from ‘Look Both Ways’ is a journalist for the newspaper who had discovered that he has testicular cancer. Finding out his illness…
These pairs of articles focus on the subject of “Ashley X,” a child with static encephalopathy who underwent radical surgical procedures to facilitate her care and, thereby, ostensibly improve her quality of life.…
If “improvements” are made to the brain they are not who they really are; they become less authentic. After Mario had brain surgery he was taking different medications to help his bad case of obsession-compulsive disorder. Slater says, “Mario, who’d tried some 40 different combinations of medications, knows this all too well. He wanted a shot at the ordinary,…
The human brain is a vastly unknown and unexplored area of the body. Daniel Gilbert, author of "Immune to Reality" and Nicholas Carr, author of "Is Google Making Us Stupid", both write about the ways that the human brain works. Gilbert discusses how the brain attempts to protect itself from the unpleasant things in life. He calls this the psychological immune system because, just like the human body 's immune system, thit removes all negatives from the brain and leaves only that which will keep the brain happy. Meanwhile, Carr discusses how the brain changes to fit with the times and molds itself to the new technology. He mentions that the human brain has changed and adapted with technological progress, but just as technology has evolved to be more like the brain, the brain has evolved to be more like technology. As a result, the human brain is a malleable structure that molds itself to positive perspectives, while avoiding the negative points of life.…
All of the medical terminologies used in “The Last Hippie,” by neurologist, Oliver Sacks, made the chapter difficult for me to understand. Although Dr. Sacks, in some ways, dumbed down the story so that the average reader could read and enjoy his book, there are many crucial terms that he simply have to use to describe Greg’s situation. All the big words that he used intimated me at first, however, after looking up the words that I didn’t know, I…
Emotional intelligence: George cares about the quality of the final product and about the effects the contaminated product would have on the health of customers. This is exhibited by George’s thought of kids drinking all of the milkshakes they were about to produce. Whetten and Cameron (2007) state that emotionally intelligent people advance a sense of caring for other people by means of their emotional responses. This is evidenced as George went to the first filter joint, he felt a knot forming in his stomach as he thought of the kids drinking all of the milkshakes they were to produce.…