A new paper: Discrepancy Between Cerebral Structure and Cognitive Functioning, A Review (Michael Nahm, PhD, David Rousseau, PhD, and Bruce Greyson, MD).
(The paper explains how some neurophysiologists have theorized that extensive reorganization of neural functioning (neural plasticity) into a thin remaining layer of neurons is responsible for such cases. At this point this is just speculation. Mostly, such cases are just ignored.)
Comment: any valid neurocognitive theory has to account for such extreme cases of normal or even high mental functioning despite severe brain deficits due to conditions like hydrocephalus or brain injury, and also cases of savant syndrome, that are summarized in this paper. The prevailing materialist mind=brain concepts have grave difficulties here.
Quote:"...several cases involving brain dysplasias (abnormal cell development) and brain lesions (cell damage) indicate that large amounts of brain mass and its organic structures, even entire hemispheres, can be drastically altered, damaged, or even absent without causing a substantial impairment of the mental capacities of the affected persons. These exceptional individuals display a notable discrepancy between the condition of their cerebral structures and the quality of their cognitive functioning."
(The paper explains how some neurophysiologists have theorized that extensive reorganization of neural functioning (neural plasticity) into a thin remaining layer of neurons is responsible for such cases. At this point this is just speculation. Mostly, such cases are just ignored.)
Quote:"Indeed, one might wonder whether such processes of reorganization are purely self-organizing processes of neuronal tissue in response to external stimuli, or whether the mind or “the self ” actively participates in these processes. Several studies suggest that the brain can indeed be altered by mental stimuli and processes on the molecular, cellular, and neural circuit levels. In a review focusing on neuroimaging studies, Beauregard (http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/dow...1&type=pdf) summarized examples of mental influence on brain structure from research into emotional self-regulation, psychotherapy, and placebo experiments. He concluded that these studies strongly support the view that thoughts, feelings, beliefs, and volition do exert a causal influence on brain plasticity, and he pointed to the obvious fact that mental causation is an essential ingredient for successful therapies. This is, of course, also valid for patients who train to regain lost faculties after strokes, hemispherectomy, or brain injuries. The degree of success in rewiring the brain is clearly dependent on the patients' volition and purposeful training. According to Beauregard (in the same paper), such findings call into question positions in which all mental processes are thought to be entirely reducible to biochemical processes."
Comment: any valid neurocognitive theory has to account for such extreme cases of normal or even high mental functioning despite severe brain deficits due to conditions like hydrocephalus or brain injury, and also cases of savant syndrome, that are summarized in this paper. The prevailing materialist mind=brain concepts have grave difficulties here.