Biology Magazine

How The Brain Draws A Little You

Posted on the 27 July 2013 by Gerard @presurfer
How The Brain Draws A Little Youimage credit
Inside each of us is a miniature version of ourselves. The Canadian neurologist Wilder Penfield discovered this little person in the 1930s, when he opened up the skulls of his patients to perform brain surgery. He would sometimes apply a little electric jolt to different spots on the surface of the brain and ask his patients -still conscious - to tell him if they felt anything.
Sometimes their tongues tingled. Other times their hand twitched. Penfield drew a map of these responses. He ended up with a surreal portrait of the human body stretched out across the surface of the brain. In a 1950 book, he offered a map of this so-called homunculus.
(via Neatorama)

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