The great brain debate - Ted Altschuler

295,814 views ・ 2014-11-17

TED-Ed


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In 1861, two scientists got into a very brainy argument.
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Specifically, they had opposing ideas of how speech and memory
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operated within the human brain.
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Ernest Aubertin, with his localistic model,
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argued that a particular region or the brain
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was devoted to each separate process.
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Pierre Gratiolet, on the other hand, argued for the distributed model,
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where different regions work together
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to accomplish all of these various functions.
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The debate they began reverberated throughout the rest of the century,
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involving some of the greatest scientific minds of the time.
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Aubertin and his localistic model had some big names on his side.
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In the 17th century, René Descartes had assigned the quality
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of free will and the human soul to the pineal gland.
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And in the late 18th century, a young student named Franz Joseph Gall
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had observed that the best memorizers in his class had the most prominent eyes
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and decided that this was due to higher development
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in the adjacent part of the brain.
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As a physician, Gall went on to establish the study of phrenology,
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which held that strong mental faculties corresponded to
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highly developed brain regions, observable as bumps in the skull.
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The widespread popularity of phrenology throughout the early 19th century
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tipped the scales towards Aubertin's localism.
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But the problem was that Gall had never bothered to scientifically test
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whether the individual brain maps he had constructed
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applied to all people.
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And in the 1840's, Pierre Flourens challenged phrenology
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by selectively destroying parts of animal brains
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and observing which functions were lost.
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Flourens found that damaging the cortex
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interfered with judgement or movement in general,
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but failed to identify any region associated with one specific function,
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concluding that the cortex carried out brain functions as an entire unit.
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Flourens had scored a victory for Gratiolet, but it was not to last.
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Gall's former student, Jean-Baptiste Bouillaud,
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challenged Flourens' conclusion,
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observing that patients with speech disorders
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all had damage to the frontal lobe.
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And after Paul Broca's 1861 autopsy of a patient who had lost the power
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to produce speech, but not the power to understand it,
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revealed highly localized frontal lobe damage,
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the distributed model seemed doomed.
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Localism took off.
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In the 1870's, Karl Wernicke associated part of the left temporal lobe
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with speech comprehension.
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Soon after, Eduard Hitzig and Gustav Fritsch
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stimulated a dog's cortex and discovered a frontal lobe region
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responsible for muscular movements.
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Building on their work, David Ferrier mapped each piece of cortex
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associated with moving a part of the body.
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And in 1909, Korbinian Brodmann built his own cortex map with 52 separate areas.
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It appeared that the victory of Aubertin's localistic model was sealed.
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But neurologist Karl Wernicke had come up with an interesting idea.
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He reasoned that since the regions for speech production and comprehension
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were not adjacent,
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then injuring the area connecting them might result
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in a special type of language loss, now known as receptive aphasia.
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Wernicke's connectionist model helped explain disorders
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that didn't result from the dysfunction of just one area.
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Modern neuroscience tools reveal a brain more complex than
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Gratiolet, Aubertin, or even Wernicke imagined.
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Today, the hippocampus is associated with two distinct brain functions:
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creating memories and processing location in space.
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We also now measure two kinds of connectivity:
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anatomical connectivity between two adjoining
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regions of cortex working together,
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and functional connectivity between separated regions
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working together to accomplish one process.
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A seemingly basic function like vision
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is actually composed of many smaller functions,
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with different parts of the cortex representing
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shape, color and location in space.
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When certain areas stop functioning, we may recognize an object,
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but not see it, or vice versa.
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There are even different kinds of memory for facts and for routines.
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And remembering something like your first bicycle
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involves a network of different regions each representing the concept
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of vehicles, the bicycle's shape, the sound of the bell,
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and the emotions associated with that memory.
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In the end, both Gratiolet and Aubertin turned out to be right.
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And we still use both of their models to understand how cognition happens.
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For example, we can now measure brain activity on such a fine time scale
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that we can see the individual localized processes that comprise
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a single act of remembering.
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But it is the integration of these different processes and regions
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that creates the coherent memory we experience.
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The supposedly competing theories prove to be two aspects
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of a more comprehensive model,
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which will in turn be revised and refined
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as our scientific techologies and methods for understanding the brain improve.
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