| Literature DB >> 32399946 |
Edward H F de Haan1, Paul M Corballis2, Steven A Hillyard3, Carlo A Marzi4, Anil Seth5, Victor A F Lamme6, Lukas Volz7, Mara Fabri8, Elizabeth Schechter9, Tim Bayne10, Michael Corballis2, Yair Pinto6.
Abstract
Recently, the discussion regarding the consequences of cutting the corpus callosum ("split-brain") has regained momentum (Corballis, Corballis, Berlucchi, & Marzi, Brain, 141(6), e46, 2018; Pinto et al., Brain, 140(5), 1231-1237, 2017a; Pinto, Lamme, & de Haan, Brain, 140(11), e68, 2017; Volz & Gazzaniga, Brain, 140(7), 2051-2060, 2017; Volz, Hillyard, Miller, & Gazzaniga, Brain, 141(3), e15, 2018). This collective review paper aims to summarize the empirical common ground, to delineate the different interpretations, and to identify the remaining questions. In short, callosotomy leads to a broad breakdown of functional integration ranging from perception to attention. However, the breakdown is not absolute as several processes, such as action control, seem to remain unified. Disagreement exists about the responsible mechanisms for this remaining unity. The main issue concerns the first-person perspective of a split-brain patient. Does a split-brain harbor a split consciousness or is consciousness unified? The current consensus is that the body of evidence is insufficient to answer this question, and different suggestions are made with respect to how future studies might address this paucity. In addition, it is suggested that the answers might not be a simple yes or no but that intermediate conceptualizations need to be considered.Entities:
Keywords: Consciousness agents; Epilepsy; Lateralization; Split-brain; Visual perception
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32399946 PMCID: PMC7305066 DOI: 10.1007/s11065-020-09439-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychol Rev ISSN: 1040-7308 Impact factor: 7.444
Fig. 1One of the most well-known split-brain findings is that the patient claims verbally not to have seen the stimulus in the left visual field, yet indicates the identity of it with their left hand. This suggests that the left hemisphere (controlling verbal output) is blind to the left visual field, while the right hemisphere (controlling the left hand) does perceive it
Fig. 2Although most split-brain patients cannot compare visual features such as shape and object identity across the midline, other features, such as good continuation of lines, and apparent motion, are integrated without a corpus callosum