In my day job, I’m grateful - if a bit confused - about how
I managed to be one of the lucky few that get to do for money what they’d
probably be doing anyway: studying things that fascinate me. I work in
neuroimaging, and in the midst of all the technical tom-foolery and undeniable
hype there’s genuine nuggets of the weird, the wonderful and the fantastically
enigmatic. One phenomenon that’s always a crowd-pleaser is split-brain surgery.
A method of last resort for ‘refractory’ epilepsy which won’t respond to
treatment, the corpus callosotomy procedure involves severing – partially or even completely - the main white matter
super-highway between the brain’s two hemispheres in the hope of preventing the
spread of seizure activity. The thing that fascinates neuroscientists and the
lay public alike is the dissociation between behaviors that appear to be
handled by one side of the brain versus the other. Today focus is: if it is possible that your one hand may not know what your other
hand is doing, what happens when you ask them to explain themselves? Michael Gazzaniga is particularly associated with characterising split-brain
phenomena, and in an enlightening experiment he and his co-workers went some
way to exploring that question.
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| Segregation of visual information |
To begin with – to satisfy the good science-angel over my
right shoulder - I have to acknowledge that for the sack of brevity and clarity
I’m going glossing over subtleties. I’ll be adopting – appropriately enough
given my theme – a story telling voice where bits of the brain ‘control’ behaviors and interpret information, ignoring the complexities of what that
might mean. That said, before I get into the nitty-gritty of the experiment,
there are a couple of background facts to consider. Have a look at the picture
above and ignore all the labels: for our purposes they’re unimportant. Consider
only the green and the purple. They indicate the left and right visual fields,
and the path that the information takes to the visual cortex at the back of the
brain. Notice that for each eye, the green purple split is half-and-half at the
eyes, but one or the other at the
visual cortex. What this depicts is the way that left half of the visual field of each
eye is processed by the right side of the brain, and the right side of the
visual field by the left hemisphere. You have a similar cross over in primary motor ( ‘movement’) processing too, but thankfully easier to explain: the left (mainly) controls the right,
the right (mainly) controls the left. The point I’m laboring is this: each
hemisphere has sensory input that only it receives, and an output system that
only it mediates. In the context of split-brain patients, you sever the means
of communication between the two hemispheres, interrupting the sharing of this side-dependent information.
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| Split Brain Experiment [1] |
In the experiment
depicted in the image above, Gazzaniga and co. [1] took advantage of this
disconnect to display different images to split-brain patients in such a way
that one picture was ‘seen’ only by the left hemisphere, one ‘seen’ only by the
right. The patient was then asked to point to an image in front of them that
was associated with the one they saw on the screen. The left hemisphere, seeing only the image of the chicken presented
only to the right visual field,
pointed with the right hand to the chicken’s
foot. The right hemisphere, seeing only the image of a snowed-in house, pointed
with the left hand to the shovel. The patient’s attention was then directed to
the two images that they have pointed to, and asked why the left hand (the
right hemisphere) is pointing to the shovel. Language - in most people
- is asymmetrically represented, and is
left-lateralised in most people. Simplifying again, what this means is that -
in general - if you ask a question of a split-brain patient, it’s thought to be
the left hemisphere that answers you. And since it does not know why the left hand
is pointing to the shovel, it does something very interesting. It makes up a neat
causal story: the right hemisphere chose the shovel
to clean out the chicken shed. It’s important to understand that the patient
isn’t consciously lying: they are exhibiting a phenomenon called confabulation:
confabulation (verb: confabulate) is a memory disturbance, defined as the production of fabricated, distorted or misinterpreted memories about oneself or the world, without the conscious intention to deceive.
Interesting, no? Quaint and safely clinical. But what if you and I were also subject to generating
neat causal stories, and had just as little insight into the process that
produced them as the split-brain patient does into the behavior of the two
sides of their body? If psychology is sometimes thought of as the
science of the bleedingly obvious – with or without justice
- my nomination for an exception to all that is the work of Daniel Kahneman and
Amos Tversky. In a fruitful collaboration over several decades, they diligently
explored the unconscious biases in the decision making and judgement of
healthy, normal subjects. There’s an accessible – if a bit business orientated –
popular summary in book form,
but if I had to characterize their work in one sentence it would be the
following: People are not natural statisticians,and don't realize it. For example,
if we’re asked to make a judgement about the likelihood of an event, we might
make a search of our memory for instances of the event happening before. We then
use the ease with which we recall previous instances as a rule-of-thumb
indication of the probability of the event happening again. We know, however,
that our recall process – without our being aware – can be affected by a
multitude of extraneous factors: mood, attention, prior beliefs, the way the question is asked and so on. But the bias is even
more pernicious than that because the strategy itself is wrong: the true guide
to the probability of an occurrence is not the times it did happen – even if we remember them correctly - but all the times
it could but did not.
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| xkcd |
Littlewood’s Law is a back-of-the-envelope calculation meant to put million-to-one ‘miracles’
in their proper context. For the sake of argument, we’ll construe an ‘event’ –
which can be exceptional or not - to occur each second, and then suggest that
your average person is awake for about eight hours a day. That means that your
average Joe should expect to experience million-to-one, seemingly miraculous
goings on at a frequency of about once a month. Lest you think this is all very well but not
important, consider an example cited by Kahneman and Tversky to demonstrate the
real-world significance of our propensity to see significance in the patterns
we think we see:
“During the extensive rocket bombing in World War II, it was generally believed that the bombing could not be random because a map of the hits revealed conspicuous gaps. Some suspected that German spies were located in the unharmed areas. A careful statistical analysis revealed that the distribution of hits was typical of a random process – and typical as well in evoking a strong impression that it was not random.”
In this case, statistical due diligence was done: but
consider the material outlay and consequences that might have ensued if the
decision had been to root out the fictitious Nazi Spies. The really crucial
point here, and the big difference with the split-brain patients is that in the
patients’ case there actually was a cause: the experimenter’s choice of images.
The patient’s mistake was to misattribute
the cause to the wrong thing: the left-hemisphere’s reading of the right-hemisphere’s
choice. But in the universal difficulty in considering all the things that that
didn’t happen in the context of a truly large number of events, we don’t just misattribute causes: we posit them where
none exists.
At this point, I could score an easy point and liken this
bias to the attachment of religious
significance to events that are of personal
significance. Indeed, I’ve treated something like that theme before. Or I could draw a comparison between this
psychological preference for meaningful, causal stories to the wider human need for meaning in general. But I’d rather
consider Charles Fort, and his parable of the rain of periwinkles and the story
of Mad St.Fishmonger. Fort was a chronicler of weird, ‘unexplainable’ events
and a positer of non-mainstream theories – such as the Super-Sargasso Sea
dimension were all lost things end up – that he may or may not have been
serious about (see quote, above). It is clear that he was concerned that
positivist scientism could seek explain away and conventionalize truly Weird Shit,
and end up providing ‘explanations’ that are just as fantastic in the process.
For example, he recounts an alleged rain of fish in Worcester in 1881. Satirizing skeptics and their dogmatic belief that miracles cannot happen, he characterizes the only
two explanation open to them. Either a strangely selective hurricane that could
deposit only fish but not water nor seaweed or pebbles happened along. Or else,
a hugely industrious and preternaturally stealthy fishmonger went to the
expense and trouble of pulling a massive prank, without being seen or helped.
There are extraordinary occurrences and conventionalization cloaks them, and the more commonplace the cloakery, the more satisfactory. Periwinkles appear upon a tract of land, through which there is a road. A fishmonger did it.– Charles Fort, Lo!
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| Gravure de pluie de poissons |
[1] Gazzaniga, M.S.
(1998). The Split Brain Revisited. Scientific American 279, 1, 35-39.




Interesting stuff as always.
ReplyDeleteThis brings to mind a couple of reading suggestions - not that you need any more, of course, but nevertheless.
A couple of months ago, I read Delusions of Gender by Cordelia Fine. (Incidentally, the experience of reading it was what finally, truly allowed me to accept the Kindle. The book was mentioned in a Guardian article I was reading; I looked it up and saw that it looked really interesting; I went on to my Kindle store and saw that for a paltry £1.50, I could start reading it in thirty seconds' time. I do not have the willpower to battle such a temptation) She examines the various pseudoneurological explanations for the differences between men and women, and rubbishes the lot with beautifully sarcastic critiques of their 'evidence', whether it's cherrypicking results or serious methodological flaws in the studies themselves. Nothing to do with the subject matter of this blog post, of course, but your caveat about the simplification made me think of it - she has a lot to say about the idea that region X 'controls' language or region Y is where memory is stored etc, not to mention being pretty blunt about the limitations of FMRI scans. My favourite part was when she explained that a certain region 'lights up' in so many processes that she more or less thinks of it as the on button. She's pretty harsh on Pinker, too (though I grudgingly had to accept her points as she argued them so well) so I'd be interested to see what you make of it.
The other one, if you haven't read it already, is Nightfall by Isaac Asimov and Robert Silverberg. I started reading it on the train yesterday and it was a proper read-two-thirds-of-the-book-in-one-sitting-and-curse-when-arriving-at-my-stop kind of novel. It explores a lot of interesting ethical dilemmas in science, like whether it is right to suppress a scientific discovery or hypothesis if it could have potentially harmful effects to society, and also Occam's Razor in regards to impossible, unexplainable events. I haven't quite finished it but it's been amazing so far.