Harnessing the Brain’s Neuro-Compensatory Processes: Lessons from a High-Functioning Person with Complete Agenesis of the Corpus Callosum

Krysta J. Trevis, Eugene McTavish, T. Winter, Yan Fu, J. McTavish, Ben Wilson, J. Oliver, E. Franz
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Abstract

It remains elusive how and why some people born with profound brain structure abnormalities develop high levels of intellect and near normal behaviour, while others with what appears to be the same or similar structural abnormalities experience far more concerning phenotypical outcomes. To begin to address this issue, a high-functioning female (aged 17 years at testing) born with complete callosal agenesis (ACC1) was tested on a series of psychophysical tests requiring unimanual-sequential or bimanual object weight discrimination; the latter of which is believed to depend on the integrity of the corpus callosum. In all five variants of the weight-discrimination task, ACC1’s performance was well within two standard deviations of the sample distribution mean. Arguably within the normal range, her performance warrants further investigation. Results suggest that individuals like ACC1 hold the secret to future understanding of the elusive neuro-compensatory processes of the human brain.
利用大脑的神经代偿过程:来自胼胝体完全缺失的高功能患者的经验教训
一些生来就有严重大脑结构异常的人,如何以及为什么会发展出高水平的智力和接近正常的行为,而另一些似乎具有相同或类似结构异常的人,却经历了多得多的表型结果,这仍然是难以捉摸的。为了开始解决这一问题,我们对一名患有完全性胼胝体发育(ACC1)的高功能女性(测试时17岁)进行了一系列心理物理测试,这些测试需要单手顺序或双手物体重量歧视;后者被认为依赖于胼胝体的完整性。在所有五个变体的权重辨别任务中,ACC1的表现在样本分布平均值的两个标准差范围内。可以说在正常范围内,她的表现值得进一步调查。结果表明,像ACC1这样的个体掌握着未来理解人类大脑中难以捉摸的神经代偿过程的秘密。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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