I have ASD, and I am thinking of all the therapists who told me I had flat affect, when I knew that my emotions were all over the place, but I knew it was just not showing. I told them so, I told them no, I do feel a lot of emotions. And their response amounted to "no you don't, I can see it on your face". Yeah guys, thanks for teaching me about my own feelings.
I have ASD as well, and suffice to say I've been called intimidating and emotionless, having dead-eyes and whatnot. I've been invalidated of my own feelings in my teenage years for so long that I often forget I'm supposed to have them.
@@PBMS123 _"it also shows theres no such thing as the soul"_ I wouldn't say that. I mean, you're making mention of a spiritual concept that can't be proven any more than it can be disproven. If souls do exist, perhaps they are so complicated that they cannot be understood in a scientific sense, let alone any human one.
@@eliesh3833 thats just hand waving it away "oh well maybe it just too complicated" Lets be real, the way the soul is thought today is disproven by the fact that there are two distinct personalities.
"If I yell at him, it just doesn't seem to work like its suppose to, its better just to have a calm conversation and tell him i'm angry." Hmmm..... Maybe we are the brain damaged, tramatized ones.
Yeah that was stupid. All of their problems aren't necessarily specific to the condition "He just loves to play video games!" and hard to make friends, etc.
I think what that was getting at is he can’t pick up on someone’s emotions via tone of voice. For example, I can tell how someone is feeling by the way they say something. Tony can not.
@@TrueGoose117 -- The only data they have is about giving verbal answers, and the hypothesis is the emotion center and the speech centers aren't connected. This is a hypothesis that was developed in the much more extensive tests done by Sperry in the 60s. There is basically no data on how such disconnections affect daily life, apart from some observations of hands disagreeing on matters of breaking a diet or domestic abuse. There are just too few split brain subjects, and all of them have placed well withing human norms. Whether that means split brain isn't all that disruptive outside of specially designed circumstances, is easy to bypass using older parts of the brain, or is comparable to the development of some other brains that do have a corpus callosum, no one knows.
Good thing the dad figured that out tho. Some dads back in an older era would have yelled and beat their kid until they showed enough emotion that the dad was satisfied. Thankfully this guy realized it doesn't do anything and it hasn't lead to him being abusive.
@An Meme being isolated no matter the reason tends to make you more attracted to activities that you can do alone or that don't depend on physical friends. Video games, social network and all that fill that role perfectly.
11:00 easy. Speech is unreliable since that is mainly controlled by the left hemisphere, however the both hemispheres have motor controls. Left controls the right side, and right controls the left side. All you need to do is have him choose the emotions by pointing to or pressing the option with his left hand. This would make both the input and output on one hemisphere
Yeah, there seems to be a lot of bias here. He seems relatively normal and I haven't heard of adults who have had their brain split later in life suddenly feeling emotionally disconnected.
"i cant yell at him because he wont be able to tell im displeased with him so it does no good" well maybe we should stop yelling at kids period? like they said, this part of the brain develops around 10-12, making them understand social shit better. kids dont deserve to get yelled at for shit they dont understand yet.
Citical phase is actually around 6. I also think it is intellectually dishonest to claim kids don't understand things before 10. They survived 4 years of school by then with all the abstract learning and social maneuvering that comes with it. Besides: understanding often comes with punishment and reward in the first place. The punishment either comes in the form of yelling or in having to wait for about 20 more years to finally realize yourself and find yourself in quite a pickle: okay my parents were nice and i had to learn myself, but now I am a decade or more behind everyone else and am unemployable. That said I think yelling is ineffective. Only hysteric moms would do it. Disappointment and punishment can be done in less shrill and more respectful ways.
my mom yelled so much at me as a kid that i'm disappointed in myself whenever i color outside of a line, and nobody seems to care or accept the fact that it was my mom's fault edit: we should be stern when telling kids something they did was bad, eg coloring on walls. You wouldn't scream at your dog for chewing a shoe, you would scold them. I'm pretty sure that scolding and giving a small punishment is better than yelling at a kid or a dog, as I'd probably be better off if my mom had done that for me instead.
11:11 So probably reads emotions but doesn't put words on them. Just give him a way of answering through his right brain? A fish can't climb a tree, but it can swim up an underwater tree.
Offer his left hand 4 or 5 different shapes or items (each one connected to a specific face impression („happy“, „sad“, „angry“ etc.) to pick it, depending on which face impression he‘s shown to - so his right hemisphere will easily make it possible for him to answer correctly. As long as left hemisphere only is asked, there‘s only guessing!
she has a passion to help people, what's wrong with that? She felt like she didn't fit in, but she can process those emotions unlike people in Tony's situation, so she wants to help them. It's a great thing people like her find passion projects like this to really help people.
Perhaps partially: I suspect that her workings involves a lot of thought & emotion like many other peoples workings probably do. Either way I personally think that it could hold value either way. Or maybe she did it because she was a zebra-shaped fire-breathing hamster with 'too much' bravado & an awfully-breathing avocado. What do you think?
In the video, Dr. Lynn Paul mentions that the Corpus Callosum becomes fully developed around 10 and 12 years of age. However,the Corpus Callosum must develop properly during the pregnancy. If a person does not have his or her Corpus Callosum, it cannot grow later in life. The brain does seem to compensate the missing Corpus Callosum for a lot of ACC kids.
@@ametamaa When criticizing someone, it's essential that you have the same level of comprehension (in the topic, and in general) -- than the person you're criticizing. What that 12 y/o comment says is correct (even if it's confusing to you). The corpus callosum must BEGIN TO develop properly in-utero. Later in life, around age 10-12, it completes development (mostly maximizing myelination). However that completion of development cannot occur if it had not BEGUN TO form during pregnancy. It does not matter that a comment is 12 years old. That "old" comment is still more correct and useful than your "recent" comment. Time does not affect the correctness of information. Only a better study/experiment can do that, and a newer study is not always better. You provided no new knowledge to contradict what was said by Kyle G. It's best to not disparage others. Be respectful when bringing up new knowledge.
@@whoknew4722 the statement is correct but it doesn't give any relevant information, that's why it makes no sense. of course the corpus callosum can only complete development around 10-12 if it was there in the first place
Ikr, she said she suffered the same social isolation as this kid but the way she talked to him it seemed like she was finally compensating for it and getting to passively mock someone like that.
I noticed that he wears glasses. The first thing that came to mind is how they were able to get the prescription right for his left eye since the left eye sends signals to the right hemisphere of the brain which isn't able to communicate verbally as I understand it. I find this topic absolutely intriguing.
So if both sides can't connect, does that mean there are two persons, each with their own realities? Is the person speaking only one side of the brain then?
Dereck Ashmed or whatever, they don’t. They can’t. Hence why the left eye can’t vocabulate what it sees. Because that part of the brain doesn’t have speech.
I really liked your comment on yelling. That's how I feel when someone yells at me. The same message you have come across just as clearly and understandable if it was spoken in a normal tone of voice.
@@Heyu7her3 Ok, I had to go back and watch this interesting video again and I understand what you are saying. A normal person has feelings of some kind when being yelled at whereas someone without the corpus callosum doesn't necessarily even know the difference if someone is yelling or not.
Those face tests are inaccurate because the played emotions in the faces are creating a swaying variable for the test. The face pictures should be taken from people with real emotions, not play acted emotions. It would be interesting to see how the patients would see real emotions in people. The results would be much more focused.
I'd agree with you. It's hard to judge based on pictures alone. Our minds rely on additional contextual hints as well (or, at least my own does). However, these pictures are a standard test set used in the industry. That said, maybe they shouldn't be?
The whole video I was wondering where the control group was. The quality of your testing data doesn't matter too much, as long as it's enough for your groups to perform differently. If you got 20 introverted people, had them all take the test, and this guy still tested worse, then that means something. Do it again, but answer by pointing at a word or something: even better. But don't talk to me before you have a control group!
Are there any studies that go the extra mile and ask the right brain to provide answers by picking emotions with the left hand? Seems like a logical step.
What if he stated out loud what he thinks (so that the other hemisphere hears), then wrote (so that the first one sees)? In such a way let the two brain communicate.
What I would like to know is that if he never developed a corpus callosum, then what exactly happened as he grew? Did the plasticity of the brain change anything for him? Or is it that plasticity hasn't really happened because it's until 10-12 that the corpus callosum really develops?
Is there not yet a medical solution to this? I imagine it would be pretty complex if its possible at all, but it would be fascinating to see how someone like Jared reacts to suddenly having these hemispheres meet. Like those videos of people seeing color or hearing sound for the first time... times 10!
Since they remove this part of brain from people suffering major epilepsy (brain hemispheres communicating too rapidly with each other) then I'm afraid the same thing would happen to this kid maybe.
@@blackwersus the kid missing his corpus callosum has nothing to do with epilepsy treatment, it never formed in the first place due to a birth defect. there would probably be unforeseeable consequences, but that would have nothing to do with the epilepsy treatment other people have received
as they said, it's the biggest connection in the human body. It's impossible to join so many tiny nerves without failure with the technology we have now
@@wojciechmilczarek6051 -- There have been examples of reconnecting nerves that were never supposed to be connected in patients with cripping tissue damage. Sometimes the brain will rewire itself to use the new nerves as if they were the original ones. That being said, adding billions of nerve connections would be an amazing feat to happen in a petri dish, let alone a living brain, so why risk such a massive untested operation on someone who functions at a typical level?
I imagine he would suffer some sort of emotional shock. Like, what if his right brain is super depressed due to lack of social interaction? If I were to be forced to be mute with nothing but a hand and eye to communicate while a near identical version of me did all the talking, I would go crazy.
Wait a minute, if the brain is split in two and the two hemisphere controlling the two parts of the body can't communicate but Tony can still manage to walk and eat and blink both of his eyes, can that mean that voluntary muscle control as a whole lies with some other entity ? Or does that mean that there is still a way that the hemispheres can communicate and coordinate that we don't know of yet ? Because one thing is for sure that either there is an entity above these two hemispheres or there is a general agreement between them otherwise wouldn't there be endless infighting, indecisiveness and awkward movements ?
That other entity you are talking about is called 'autonomic nervous system'. It's the reason why you're alive, it controls things like your organs working the way they should, you breathing, blinking, the autofocus of your pupil, your sexual stimulation (or rather your reaction) as well as what we know as reflexes. All those things that your body does without you having to conciosly tell your brain to do it and which you cannot control (or at least not directly). As for things like walking and talking, those are controlled by one half of the brain and doesn't need coordination with the other half. And that's what I remember from my biology classes in high school.
Good observation and great question. That is how scientists (should) think. Your description of "walk and eat and blink both of his eyes" as "voluntary muscle control" is not fully correct. Blinking of eyes occur mostly by the brain-stem (through multiple cranial nerves) using the sympathetic nervous system. Detailed musculature control during eating is also a lower-level function. It is possible to use our volition (choice) to do these, by use of our cognitive (cortical) regions, but that is not typical. Most of the time blinking and eating motions are nearly fully automatic. (We do not think when to move our tongue, and whether to open our mouth first, then close it, how rapidly, etc.). Our DECISION to do something (eat or walk) IS made (decided) in our cerebrum (the "thinking" brain). However, once that decision is made, it is "sent" to the cerebellum and to lower brain regions that then take-over and fully perform that activity on their own. Our thinking brain is not involved during normal open-space walking (e.g. it is somewhat involved in obstacle avoidance). So, it's possible for either the LEFT or RIGHT hemisphere (OR even for both simultaneously) (part of our cortex) to decided to walk or eat. They then send that decision below. The lower regions then initiate "walking" or "eating" motions, and they handle minute motions (first move this muscle this amount, then retract this other muscle...). The cerebellum handles much of it: individual motions, balance (when walking), proprioception (knowing where our foot is, while walking, so we do not stub our toe on the ground), etc. In people with split-brain, it IS possible for their left and right hemispheres to disagree (one side wants to walk, the other does not). However, everyone's brain has asymmetric lateralization (one side is dominant, for specific behaviors). Thus, they probably have one side that is dominant for motion -- and that side always "wins" in what it wants. In people with split-brains, their brains (more specifically, the submissive hemisphere) may have learned over time to "stop wanting" (or to be less demanding) with behaviors it realizes it will be over-ruled on by the dominant hemisphere. Each hemisphere eventually learns/knows that there is another (or more than one) hemisphere (other "brains") in themselves, that will overrule some of their decisions. So that hemisphere learns to become passive on some behaviors.
@@whoknew4722 Thanks for your detailed response. I'm studying the brain right now and your explanation really helped to sum up in a very clear way, what I've been learning in this particular section of my textbook. Thank you again for taking the time to elaborate.
Alrighty I’m 2 years late for this but what we learnt in Med School Neuroanatomy is that the Voluntary motor fibers from Area 4 and 6 of each Cerebral hemispheres decussate (cross) at the lower border of pons which is located at the hind brain and has nothing to do with corpus callosum connecting the 2 cerebral hemispheres. So the Voluntary motor fibers from the right would travel down and decussate at the level of pons to the opposite side and supply the left half of the body. So voluntary motor control isn’t given to any separate entity other than the motor areas of the cerebral cortex. I see the other person replied something about ANS controlling voluntary activity, that’s incorrect ANS doesn’t control voluntary actions.
Now correct me if I am wrong, if he had been born with a corpus callosum, but had it removed later in life, would he be better at identifying facial expressions because of memory? of course the two hemispheres could not communicate with each other, but maybe he would be able to better identify them verbally when his right hemisphere was triggered?
Now in 2023, they showed that separate left right can learn what the other is lacking have people born with this, have two operators whi can play games with each other, not knowing what the other half does.
This makes me think of psychoanalysts who made crazy theories about the subconscious based on client's speech. They would say that the patient isn't conscious of something if they don't talk about it. So it's maybe no so much unconscious, whatever consciousness is, but just that the information didn't reach the speech area of the brain. They just based everything on speech. No wonder some of them concluded "the subconscious is structured as a language". Perhaps if they had asked patients to draw during thereapy they would have concluded that the subconscious is structured as imagery...
What's missing here, with certain substances, won't say which to not encourage anything illegal, you can recognize the difference between the two halves, their communication between each other, and that they have distinct wants, preferences, and so on. Everyone has two complete independent consciousnesses that the typical person never recognizes and automatically makes excuses and dismisses things the less dominant one has them do all the time. I have caught myself doing it when the less dominant part reached for a food it wanted to eat, when the dominant part didn't have a strong preference of what to eat. Some people may excuse an action as habit, when it isn't their normal habit, or the classic split brain clip of the guy saying hammer and drawing a saw. We have went most of our lives not recognizing we are actually two people in one, which is wildly fascinating when you do recognize it.
That makes you many times more likely to be dependent on your caretakers. And hence very less independent, at least in your physical existence, if not mental as well. Is that right?
@@N0Xa880iUL I don't think so I do fine on my own. But I guess a little as I do live with my parents, but not bc I need them but bc housing cost is not really affordable for single persons
@5:44 The dad said, "" Well, I guess he disengaged because food and TV really became his thing"" Did you take a look at this kid's mom? She does the same thing. Just like many depressed people - they sit in front of the TV and pig out. the kid sounds totally normal.
As someone who used to help children with various disabilities in a summer program who has disabilities, I would be very interested to see how this effect children with monocular vision.
He was right. The man was trying to pull a face of supposed anger, but he was actually sad. Same for the man who was pretending to be sad when he was actually angry. There is nothing wrong with this guy. He is just more honest than most. He was abused and struggles the same as anyone in the same situation. All our brains split under the same situations. If you read this: Keep trying to learn. Keep watching people and trying to talk to them. Stop gaming. Watch videos with interesting speakers on interesting topics. The brain compensates and even restores. Get yourself in a safe situation. A person can heal from anything if they want to. I've seen it many times.
always wondered why those always confused me, actor get bored looks sad but makes a angry face or sits in a hot room waiting to look sad but he is upset.
The problem with this video is that it doesn't show any effects which are unique to people with split brain. They talk about the lack of social skills, but a lot of people have trouble socializing and I'm sure most of them have their corpus collosum in place. Facial expressions experiment is also a bit underwhelming. It's not like Tony can't recognize facial expressions at all, which would be interesting. He's just kinda bad at it, as most of the introverts. In general, I wanted to see some cool experiments with left and right eyes/hands working separately. Now I feel slightly disappointed that I just watched a 14 minutes session with multiple adults bashing a young man because of his personality.
I am curios about a certain experiment for a split brain patient. The question is: If the patient got info through his left eye (right non talking brain) Does he know this info in general or not ? For example: if he read with his left eye Only that there is a danger in the room, will he react and leave the room ? or not ?
hye samir, ok this is wht i understand (correct me if i'm wrong). the patient will react and leave the room. the reason is that, he is aware of the written text read by his right hemisphere. the problem is just that, he is not able to says the written text by his mouth(and maybe he will say that he sees nothing on the paper of the written text if u asked him later). and even after he leaves the room, the patient might be asking himself by his own mouth on why would he leave the room. this is because, the information read in the right hemisphere wasn't being sent to the left so the left hemisphere wasn't aware what the right read and what he says after leaving the room would be different as the utterance came from the left hemisphere(who didn't get the information of the danger in the room) well that is from my understanding. u can try this game here for a better understanding i guess=) www.nobelprize.org/educational/medicine/split-brain/splitbrainexp.html
qilah sohaimi When you say: "Because he is aware of the written text" Who is he ? there is no "he" in this game anymore. Which part of the brain is aware of the danger? I assume right brain is aware. How could the right brain take the decision to leave the room alone ?! Does it have control of the legs for example ?! Does it have dominance !! Do both brain sides have control over those decisions equally ? To make it even more interesting: What if the right brain reads that there is a danger in the room, while the left brain reads that he needs to stay because his favorite celebrity is coming in the room for example. Which part of the brain will take control ?! And will the patient (with any of the two brain sides) be able to figure out that there is contradicting info ?
the 'he' i am referring before is the same 'he' u are referring in your question ; "For example: if HE read with his left eye Only that there is a danger in the room, will HE react and leave the room ? or not ?" there is still he, that is why in your question, u did ask the word 'he' too even if the hemisphere aren't intact anymore, he can still move his right body. and regarding on your new questions, i guess maybe they(the questions) can be answered based on what the patient is required to do and also depend on either his dominance; either right or left hemisphere of the patient tested. however, i don't really meant to say that what i say now and before is correct. just sharing out my opinion and understanding. i'm still new by the way, just doing my second year in university so i wouldn't reject or feels bad if anyone wants to correct me,
Samir Mashghoul this is a great question. I know they've done a test where they showed right and left different objects and though they chose correctly, the left brain did not know why the second object was chosen and so made up a reason. Perhaps both sides are conscious but one to a lesser degree? Scary thought.
I don't take shower, regularly. I have hard time understanding others emotions. I have trouble making eye contact. Probably should get my corpus collesum checked.
This was in 2008 before we had better diagnostic tools. It looks like they're looking at broad-range autism with AGCC. I've known adults who were born with AGCC and not all of them displayed the signs that this young man does. Correlation isn't causation. I think.
It seems like some of his answers are affirmative when he's given a leading question like: do you want to live on your own? Do you want to have a girlfriend? Etc. I wonder what his response would have been had they asked instead: do you want to stay with your parents forever? Do you want to keep being mostly alone?
@@thomasjones145 If I remember right, lefties have their two brain halfs reversed. So, when they are talking about left half, for you it's the right half of your brain and vice versa.
@Thomas Jones: sorry to say, each of the 5 earlier responses to your question are inaccurate (or they make gross assumptions). 1) Each eye has a "left" and "right" field (on its retina). So your one left eye still sees a "left" and "right" side of the world in front (though you'll see slightly less of the "right side" of the world - because your nose-bridge partly blocks the full right-sided view). The "left" field-of-view from your left eye would go to your right hemisphere. The "right" field-of-view from your left eye would go to your left hemisphere. This is because each of our retinas has a "left" and "right" half, where a retinal half is sent to only our left or right cerebral hemisphere. (it's actually a little more complex - which isn't necessary for this discussion). -----> So your left and right hemispheres EACH WILL SEE, but they will see slightly different parts (of the full world in front of you) even with your single eye.
This is one in 3000 people by the way, fairly common. Consider how many students were in your school and then the population of your city to help you understand how common this is.
The way they were explaining his personality, its making me wonder if my husband's CC has been damaged in some way: dude essentially is emotionally syunted and plays video games all the time, pretty much 0 interest in social relationships. Thats 100% my husband now, though he wasnt this bad when we met and dated. He foesnt even care to be with the kids at least.
They should have interviewed both of him, surely it feels horrible to be the half-brain that cannot speak when asked a question. they should let the one of him that can't speak write (or however) to give the "other him" a chance to express it's opinions... The discussions about "his" behavior aren't clear - which him? The left or the right?
@@Mokaigo Right brain seem to be unable to understand language, so while it may understand emotions, it doesn't understand speech... Therefore any question asked to him is practically useless to the right side since it simply won't understand. But I do wonder, maybe you could somehow make it show some kind of emotional response or something like that.
He started to lose weight and his behavior started to change. Gut brain connection. I believe the brain 2ndary and gut is primary . If the brain is dysfunctional and people have intake of high fructose, carb diet then alter that diet research has shown new rewiring in brain function
I mean… kinda. Diet does affect the brain in the same sense that the type of oil and gas affects your car. Nutrition keeps cells healthy, including brain cells. The brain always adapts to change (like a change in diet) and is constantly rewiring itself, diet just makes that easier by keeping your cells functioning properly
Ok a few questions the right brain controls imagination, the left controls speech, you say the left then makes up a story. How? How does it make up a story about how it managed to get a paperclip or something like that what passed by the other hand. Even though its reasoning it has to he some form if imagination. 2 how are the eyes still in sync with eachother why don't they move independent of eachother, if they see independent of eachother.
This makes no sense to me. All I saw were a triangle and a circle moving in and out of a box having a door. I didn't see any social meaning. Yet I am reasonable normal socially. I do tend to be relative more verbal and less attuned to gesture or "body language" than the average person, but not so much that I am outside the range of normalcy. I do not have any brain damage. I had head pain so I had a brain CT scan and an electroencephalogram and they did not turn up anything abnormal.
So, I noticed his eyes move in coordination. Is the movement only controlled by one half of the brain but the interpretation split? I know that there is usually a separate bridge for the eyes in the brain in addition to the corpus callosum. Is that the reason? Is that developed in people with AGCC?
Anyone interested in this area, I highly, highly recommend you check out Dr Iian Mcgilchrist - Huge new works on the topic of the Brain Hemispheres, that make a lot of this seem very dated, as it evidently is.
So wait, he does know what the emotions are and just can't verbalize them correctly, or am I completely wrong? here from Kurzgesagt and CGP to know more but oh boy am I confused
There were some really weird comments at the end of this video, so I’ll just say that social\cultural construct is a product of the mind; meaning for the purposes of this comment, that there is no “absolutism“ about it, and because it is relativistic, it is as much about what any person makes it out to be as anything else: I say this because of what I can only think to describe as the very dangerous and detrimental false social\cultural construct and the my myth of “self sufficiency“ in short, while it is true that fundamentally speaking a title is a fiction being an “adult“ has nothing to do with one’s living arrangements, or even if a person can take care of one’s self, all it really comes down to for lake of better words being developed, being mature; meaning being able to understand that one’s actions being responsible; meaning not and trying not to be doing anything that would be for lack of better words harmful, detrimental, etc. at the very least when not absolutely necessary: as well as to the best of one’s ability doing and trying to do things that are beneficial and improve things etc instead. While that definition itself is admittedly rather vague and generalist, and may even be a little too complicated in relation to what it actually is, for lack of better words at least; in general terms “that’s it“…;)
I don't like the tone of that lady, the way he's being portrayed in the video, the way their parents talk about him. it all seems so condescending. It all reeks of "we must help him". As a boy in early 20s myself, I sure wouldn't want help all the time. Sometimes, sure. But not always. It hinders me from exploring and making mistakes. Also not always does a person who's alone is consciously making the choice to be left alone. It can be a by-product of timing of the situations or desired activities. Like gaming while family wants to watch tv. Or read when friends want to watch a movie. And similarly there can be times I would want to just sit and introspect my past, alone. This doesn't scream loneliness. And it's perfectly alright. No need to panic, parents. But people asking "why" too many times sparks an unnecessary self doubt asking "am I doing something wrong". Most importantly there is no answer to these questions other than "I don't know" which kinda leaves th these questions open, creating a loop of uncertainty. Damage done by the repeated offerings of "let me help you" is equally devastating as "why don't you let me help you".
CGP Grey anyone?
Meeeee
I was so creeped out at his video that I had to research...
CGP Grey, yeah
Mind blown!
yup
I have ASD, and I am thinking of all the therapists who told me I had flat affect, when I knew that my emotions were all over the place, but I knew it was just not showing. I told them so, I told them no, I do feel a lot of emotions. And their response amounted to "no you don't, I can see it on your face". Yeah guys, thanks for teaching me about my own feelings.
yep i have seen therapist mislead patients so much,please share more if you remember
Those people are idiots
I have ASD as well, and suffice to say I've been called intimidating and emotionless, having dead-eyes and whatnot. I've been invalidated of my own feelings in my teenage years for so long that I often forget I'm supposed to have them.
Recording yourself on video then practicing manipulating your facial expression to match your intent helps. You can also use a mirror if you prefer.
Damn
This is a pretty weird condition. It shows how strange the brain is; it's both amazing and absurd at the same time.
it also shows theres no such thing as the soul
@@PBMS123 no it doesn't it just demonstrates that the two hemispheres Perceive reality in different ways.
@@PBMS123 _"it also shows theres no such thing as the soul"_
I wouldn't say that. I mean, you're making mention of a spiritual concept that can't be proven any more than it can be disproven.
If souls do exist, perhaps they are so complicated that they cannot be understood in a scientific sense, let alone any human one.
@@eliesh3833 thats just hand waving it away "oh well maybe it just too complicated"
Lets be real, the way the soul is thought today is disproven by the fact that there are two distinct personalities.
I don't see anything weird! Typical introvert prefers video games instead of "social games".
"If I yell at him, it just doesn't seem to work like its suppose to, its better just to have a calm conversation and tell him i'm angry." Hmmm..... Maybe we are the brain damaged, tramatized ones.
Yeah that was stupid. All of their problems aren't necessarily specific to the condition "He just loves to play video games!" and hard to make friends, etc.
I think what that was getting at is he can’t pick up on someone’s emotions via tone of voice. For example, I can tell how someone is feeling by the way they say something. Tony can not.
@@TrueGoose117 -- The only data they have is about giving verbal answers, and the hypothesis is the emotion center and the speech centers aren't connected. This is a hypothesis that was developed in the much more extensive tests done by Sperry in the 60s.
There is basically no data on how such disconnections affect daily life, apart from some observations of hands disagreeing on matters of breaking a diet or domestic abuse.
There are just too few split brain subjects, and all of them have placed well withing human norms. Whether that means split brain isn't all that disruptive outside of specially designed circumstances, is easy to bypass using older parts of the brain, or is comparable to the development of some other brains that do have a corpus callosum, no one knows.
Good thing the dad figured that out tho. Some dads back in an older era would have yelled and beat their kid until they showed enough emotion that the dad was satisfied.
Thankfully this guy realized it doesn't do anything and it hasn't lead to him being abusive.
@An Meme being isolated no matter the reason tends to make you more attracted to activities that you can do alone or that don't depend on physical friends. Video games, social network and all that fill that role perfectly.
They cooked this kid more than they needed to
Same, like he seems OK
11:00 easy. Speech is unreliable since that is mainly controlled by the left hemisphere, however the both hemispheres have motor controls. Left controls the right side, and right controls the left side. All you need to do is have him choose the emotions by pointing to or pressing the option with his left hand. This would make both the input and output on one hemisphere
13 years ago
I wonder if they had him write answers with his left hand, if they’d be different than his spoken answers. His “emotional” side is mute.
That‘s perfectly correct! Or let him grab a specific item with his left hand,which is related to the particular impression.
he seems perfectly normal. I'm 20, an introvert, and I'd probably give off the same vibe.
useful vids?
bro
You sure your brain’s in one piece?
@@BlackCover95 dude that's deep
Yeah, there seems to be a lot of bias here. He seems relatively normal and I haven't heard of adults who have had their brain split later in life suddenly feeling emotionally disconnected.
"i cant yell at him because he wont be able to tell im displeased with him so it does no good" well maybe we should stop yelling at kids period? like they said, this part of the brain develops around 10-12, making them understand social shit better. kids dont deserve to get yelled at for shit they dont understand yet.
one man: louis rossman. just watch his videos about children and you'll get more advice than these random commenters, myself included, can provide.
Citical phase is actually around 6.
I also think it is intellectually dishonest to claim kids don't understand things before 10. They survived 4 years of school by then with all the abstract learning and social maneuvering that comes with it. Besides: understanding often comes with punishment and reward in the first place. The punishment either comes in the form of yelling or in having to wait for about 20 more years to finally realize yourself and find yourself in quite a pickle: okay my parents were nice and i had to learn myself, but now I am a decade or more behind everyone else and am unemployable. That said I think yelling is ineffective. Only hysteric moms would do it. Disappointment and punishment can be done in less shrill and more respectful ways.
@@karou6969 the guy who fixes macbooks?
my mom yelled so much at me as a kid that i'm disappointed in myself whenever i color outside of a line, and nobody seems to care or accept the fact that it was my mom's fault
edit: we should be stern when telling kids something they did was bad, eg coloring on walls. You wouldn't scream at your dog for chewing a shoe, you would scold them. I'm pretty sure that scolding and giving a small punishment is better than yelling at a kid or a dog, as I'd probably be better off if my mom had done that for me instead.
ya, why yell when you can beat em? Straightforward, time saving.
11:11 So probably reads emotions but doesn't put words on them.
Just give him a way of answering through his right brain? A fish can't climb a tree, but it can swim up an underwater tree.
What do you mean by “just give him a way” ?
Offer his left hand 4 or 5 different shapes or items (each one connected to a specific face impression („happy“, „sad“, „angry“ etc.) to pick it, depending on which face impression he‘s shown to - so his right hemisphere will easily make it possible for him to answer correctly.
As long as left hemisphere only is asked, there‘s only guessing!
@@mathiasschutz5469 true...
@@mathiasschutz5469 Yes this is the good way to solve it. He can give answers via pictures rather than talking.
Tony seems a very chill dude and I respect him for working and doing his best
This document feels like the little pet project of that lady to make herself feel better about her high school years
Not at all. why you think that? sorry, its been 7 months lol
That lady was so condescending
she has a passion to help people, what's wrong with that? She felt like she didn't fit in, but she can process those emotions unlike people in Tony's situation, so she wants to help them. It's a great thing people like her find passion projects like this to really help people.
Perhaps partially: I suspect that her workings involves a lot of thought & emotion like many other peoples workings probably do. Either way I personally think that it could hold value either way. Or maybe she did it because she was a zebra-shaped fire-breathing hamster with 'too much' bravado & an awfully-breathing avocado. What do you think?
She wierd
In the video, Dr. Lynn Paul mentions that the Corpus Callosum becomes fully developed around 10 and 12 years of age. However,the Corpus Callosum must develop properly during the pregnancy. If a person does not have his or her Corpus Callosum, it cannot grow later in life. The brain does seem to compensate the missing Corpus Callosum for a lot of ACC kids.
@@shoezx this comment is 12 years old and on top of that what you said makes no sense at all
@@ametamaa When criticizing someone, it's essential that you have the same level of comprehension (in the topic, and in general) -- than the person you're criticizing.
What that 12 y/o comment says is correct (even if it's confusing to you). The corpus callosum must BEGIN TO develop properly in-utero. Later in life, around age 10-12, it completes development (mostly maximizing myelination). However that completion of development cannot occur if it had not BEGUN TO form during pregnancy.
It does not matter that a comment is 12 years old. That "old" comment is still more correct and useful than your "recent" comment. Time does not affect the correctness of information. Only a better study/experiment can do that, and a newer study is not always better. You provided no new knowledge to contradict what was said by Kyle G.
It's best to not disparage others. Be respectful when bringing up new knowledge.
@@whoknew4722 the statement is correct but it doesn't give any relevant information, that's why it makes no sense. of course the corpus callosum can only complete development around 10-12 if it was there in the first place
@@ametamaa The comment could be saying that it's nobody's fault.
Ngl the way she speaks on sounds pretty demeaning :/
extremely demeaning
Ikr, she said she suffered the same social isolation as this kid but the way she talked to him it seemed like she was finally compensating for it and getting to passively mock someone like that.
The best thing is these guys can play rock, paper, scissors with themselves.
How and why did you think of that
I was an awkward kid too. It's a terrible experience to be the odd one out and not understand why.
I noticed that he wears glasses. The first thing that came to mind is how they were able to get the prescription right for his left eye since the left eye sends signals to the right hemisphere of the brain which isn't able to communicate verbally as I understand it. I find this topic absolutely intriguing.
You're never alone, you're always two.
We are incapable of realizing it because we are one and can't think separately.
So if both sides can't connect, does that mean there are two persons, each with their own realities? Is the person speaking only one side of the brain then?
I know right, it's crazy!
Dereck Ashmed or whatever, they don’t. They can’t. Hence why the left eye can’t vocabulate what it sees. Because that part of the brain doesn’t have speech.
killer calm down! It’s thanks for the answer, but that’s a very rude way to word it.
A young guy that is bored; uh I’m a grown ass nigga why would I see my momma being banged 😆 go outside you internet weirdo 🤝🤣
killer you call him a weirdo yet your getting pressed over a small mistake, if your an adult go get a life :)
I really liked your comment on yelling. That's how I feel when someone yells at me. The same message you have come across just as clearly and understandable if it was spoken in a normal tone of voice.
No, the point is that he doesn't understand you are displeased with him no matter what you do.
@@Heyu7her3 Ok, I had to go back and watch this interesting video again and I understand what you are saying. A normal person has feelings of some kind when being yelled at whereas someone without the corpus callosum doesn't necessarily even know the difference if someone is yelling or not.
Tony, you are a blessing. I'd be proud to be your mother. Such a good soul and so beautifully unique!
Those face tests are inaccurate because the played emotions in the faces are creating a swaying variable for the test. The face pictures should be taken from people with real emotions, not play acted emotions. It would be interesting to see how the patients would see real emotions in people. The results would be much more focused.
that's the standard. always has been.
They are exaggerated and still he didn't recognize them.
More subtle expression are not going to make that easier.
I'd agree with you. It's hard to judge based on pictures alone. Our minds rely on additional contextual hints as well (or, at least my own does).
However, these pictures are a standard test set used in the industry. That said, maybe they shouldn't be?
The whole video I was wondering where the control group was. The quality of your testing data doesn't matter too much, as long as it's enough for your groups to perform differently.
If you got 20 introverted people, had them all take the test, and this guy still tested worse, then that means something. Do it again, but answer by pointing at a word or something: even better. But don't talk to me before you have a control group!
yeah it seems like a super low quality test
9:20 that looks just like the set of breaking bad at the pool
Lol true.....
So true
Yeah she def gets uncomfortable around autistic people (a lot of narcissists do)
Are there any studies that go the extra mile and ask the right brain to provide answers by picking emotions with the left hand? Seems like a logical step.
Should we refer to the brain seperately now? Like specifically which hemisphere of brain you're talking about?
One is called Tim and another Tom
@@blackwersus 🤣
This fucks me up as a left handed person. My poor right brain screaming to be heard
What if he stated out loud what he thinks (so that the other hemisphere hears), then wrote (so that the first one sees)? In such a way let the two brain communicate.
I only saw shapes moving around lol
What I would like to know is that if he never developed a corpus callosum, then what exactly happened as he grew? Did the plasticity of the brain change anything for him? Or is it that plasticity hasn't really happened because it's until 10-12 that the corpus callosum really develops?
Is there not yet a medical solution to this? I imagine it would be pretty complex if its possible at all, but it would be fascinating to see how someone like Jared reacts to suddenly having these hemispheres meet. Like those videos of people seeing color or hearing sound for the first time... times 10!
Since they remove this part of brain from people suffering major epilepsy (brain hemispheres communicating too rapidly with each other) then I'm afraid the same thing would happen to this kid maybe.
@@blackwersus the kid missing his corpus callosum has nothing to do with epilepsy treatment, it never formed in the first place due to a birth defect. there would probably be unforeseeable consequences, but that would have nothing to do with the epilepsy treatment other people have received
as they said, it's the biggest connection in the human body. It's impossible to join so many tiny nerves without failure with the technology we have now
@@wojciechmilczarek6051 -- There have been examples of reconnecting nerves that were never supposed to be connected in patients with cripping tissue damage. Sometimes the brain will rewire itself to use the new nerves as if they were the original ones.
That being said, adding billions of nerve connections would be an amazing feat to happen in a petri dish, let alone a living brain, so why risk such a massive untested operation on someone who functions at a typical level?
I imagine he would suffer some sort of emotional shock. Like, what if his right brain is super depressed due to lack of social interaction? If I were to be forced to be mute with nothing but a hand and eye to communicate while a near identical version of me did all the talking, I would go crazy.
Wait a minute, if the brain is split in two and the two hemisphere controlling the two parts of the body can't communicate but Tony can still manage to walk and eat and blink both of his eyes, can that mean that voluntary muscle control as a whole lies with some other entity ? Or does that mean that there is still a way that the hemispheres can communicate and coordinate that we don't know of yet ? Because one thing is for sure that either there is an entity above these two hemispheres or there is a general agreement between them otherwise wouldn't there be endless infighting, indecisiveness and awkward movements ?
That other entity you are talking about is called 'autonomic nervous system'. It's the reason why you're alive, it controls things like your organs working the way they should, you breathing, blinking, the autofocus of your pupil, your sexual stimulation (or rather your reaction) as well as what we know as reflexes. All those things that your body does without you having to conciosly tell your brain to do it and which you cannot control (or at least not directly).
As for things like walking and talking, those are controlled by one half of the brain and doesn't need coordination with the other half.
And that's what I remember from my biology classes in high school.
Good observation and great question. That is how scientists (should) think. Your description of "walk and eat and blink both of his eyes" as "voluntary muscle control" is not fully correct. Blinking of eyes occur mostly by the brain-stem (through multiple cranial nerves) using the sympathetic nervous system. Detailed musculature control during eating is also a lower-level function. It is possible to use our volition (choice) to do these, by use of our cognitive (cortical) regions, but that is not typical. Most of the time blinking and eating motions are nearly fully automatic. (We do not think when to move our tongue, and whether to open our mouth first, then close it, how rapidly, etc.).
Our DECISION to do something (eat or walk) IS made (decided) in our cerebrum (the "thinking" brain). However, once that decision is made, it is "sent" to the cerebellum and to lower brain regions that then take-over and fully perform that activity on their own. Our thinking brain is not involved during normal open-space walking (e.g. it is somewhat involved in obstacle avoidance). So, it's possible for either the LEFT or RIGHT hemisphere (OR even for both simultaneously) (part of our cortex) to decided to walk or eat. They then send that decision below. The lower regions then initiate "walking" or "eating" motions, and they handle minute motions (first move this muscle this amount, then retract this other muscle...). The cerebellum handles much of it: individual motions, balance (when walking), proprioception (knowing where our foot is, while walking, so we do not stub our toe on the ground), etc.
In people with split-brain, it IS possible for their left and right hemispheres to disagree (one side wants to walk, the other does not). However, everyone's brain has asymmetric lateralization (one side is dominant, for specific behaviors). Thus, they probably have one side that is dominant for motion -- and that side always "wins" in what it wants. In people with split-brains, their brains (more specifically, the submissive hemisphere) may have learned over time to "stop wanting" (or to be less demanding) with behaviors it realizes it will be over-ruled on by the dominant hemisphere. Each hemisphere eventually learns/knows that there is another (or more than one) hemisphere (other "brains") in themselves, that will overrule some of their decisions. So that hemisphere learns to become passive on some behaviors.
@@whoknew4722 Thanks for your detailed response. I'm studying the brain right now and your explanation really helped to sum up in a very clear way, what I've been learning in this particular section of my textbook. Thank you again for taking the time to elaborate.
Alrighty I’m 2 years late for this but what we learnt in Med School Neuroanatomy is that the Voluntary motor fibers from Area 4 and 6 of each Cerebral hemispheres decussate (cross) at the lower border of pons which is located at the hind brain and has nothing to do with corpus callosum connecting the 2 cerebral hemispheres. So the Voluntary motor fibers from the right would travel down and decussate at the level of pons to the opposite side and supply the left half of the body. So voluntary motor control isn’t given to any separate entity other than the motor areas of the cerebral cortex. I see the other person replied something about ANS controlling voluntary activity, that’s incorrect ANS doesn’t control voluntary actions.
@@karthie003 nice
crazy how old this place is and ım here its 2022
Now correct me if I am wrong, if he had been born with a corpus callosum, but had it removed later in life, would he be better at identifying facial expressions because of memory? of course the two hemispheres could not communicate with each other, but maybe he would be able to better identify them verbally when his right hemisphere was triggered?
Your comment was two years ago but yes, that's why people who have theirs cut later in life don't appear to act any different.
Now in 2023, they showed that separate left right can learn what the other is lacking have people born with this, have two operators whi can play games with each other, not knowing what the other half does.
This makes me think of psychoanalysts who made crazy theories about the subconscious based on client's speech. They would say that the patient isn't conscious of something if they don't talk about it. So it's maybe no so much unconscious, whatever consciousness is, but just that the information didn't reach the speech area of the brain. They just based everything on speech. No wonder some of them concluded "the subconscious is structured as a language". Perhaps if they had asked patients to draw during thereapy they would have concluded that the subconscious is structured as imagery...
This is a great clip. I've been looking for good media that could illustrate split brain to my community college students. Thank you.
they could also teach him to talk in sign language. (i think it uses the part of the brain that gets information and movements but im not sure)
he reminds me alot of a friend I used to have, looks kind of similar too. He does the laugh scoff thing at the end of sentences
Those 90 degree turns are obviously the two parts looking for a path to connect.
What's missing here, with certain substances, won't say which to not encourage anything illegal, you can recognize the difference between the two halves, their communication between each other, and that they have distinct wants, preferences, and so on. Everyone has two complete independent consciousnesses that the typical person never recognizes and automatically makes excuses and dismisses things the less dominant one has them do all the time.
I have caught myself doing it when the less dominant part reached for a food it wanted to eat, when the dominant part didn't have a strong preference of what to eat.
Some people may excuse an action as habit, when it isn't their normal habit, or the classic split brain clip of the guy saying hammer and drawing a saw. We have went most of our lives not recognizing we are actually two people in one, which is wildly fascinating when you do recognize it.
That's so weird and cool :(
Spill it
You probably have D.I.D. This isn’t all people.
Left brain: Waht?
Right brain: man shut yo-
It’s a relief for me after I read the comments, the boy is totally fine
Disassociation? I do the same, I'm just uninterested in social situations.
That makes you many times more likely to be dependent on your caretakers. And hence very less independent, at least in your physical existence, if not mental as well. Is that right?
@@N0Xa880iUL I don't think so I do fine on my own. But I guess a little as I do live with my parents, but not bc I need them but bc housing cost is not really affordable for single persons
@5:44 The dad said, "" Well, I guess he disengaged because food and TV really became his thing""
Did you take a look at this kid's mom? She does the same thing.
Just like many depressed people - they sit in front of the TV and pig out. the kid sounds totally normal.
Tom Cruise really let himself go
Conciousness splited in two. Clearly there is not a center of experience and every time you experience anything, looks like a miracle.
As someone who used to help children with various disabilities in a summer program who has disabilities, I would be very interested to see how this effect children with monocular vision.
He was right. The man was trying to pull a face of supposed anger, but he was actually sad. Same for the man who was pretending to be sad when he was actually angry.
There is nothing wrong with this guy. He is just more honest than most. He was abused and struggles the same as anyone in the same situation. All our brains split under the same situations.
If you read this: Keep trying to learn. Keep watching people and trying to talk to them. Stop gaming. Watch videos with interesting speakers on interesting topics. The brain compensates and even restores. Get yourself in a safe situation. A person can heal from anything if they want to. I've seen it many times.
always wondered why those always confused me, actor get bored looks sad but makes a angry face or sits in a hot room waiting to look sad but he is upset.
Stop gaming?
A person can heal from anything if they want to. I've seen it many times.
~that's just mean
Looks pretty normal to me. As far as a human being needs to survive.
The problem with this video is that it doesn't show any effects which are unique to people with split brain. They talk about the lack of social skills, but a lot of people have trouble socializing and I'm sure most of them have their corpus collosum in place.
Facial expressions experiment is also a bit underwhelming. It's not like Tony can't recognize facial expressions at all, which would be interesting. He's just kinda bad at it, as most of the introverts.
In general, I wanted to see some cool experiments with left and right eyes/hands working separately. Now I feel slightly disappointed that I just watched a 14 minutes session with multiple adults bashing a young man because of his personality.
I totally agree with you wrote
0:22 I said “shapes moving” 😭
I am curios about a certain experiment for a split brain patient. The question is: If the patient got info through his left eye (right non talking brain) Does he know this info in general or not ?
For example: if he read with his left eye Only that there is a danger in the room, will he react and leave the room ? or not ?
hye samir, ok this is wht i understand (correct me if i'm wrong). the patient will react and leave the room. the reason is that, he is aware of the written text read by his right hemisphere. the problem is just that, he is not able to says the written text by his mouth(and maybe he will say that he sees nothing on the paper of the written text if u asked him later). and even after he leaves the room, the patient might be asking himself by his own mouth on why would he leave the room. this is because, the information read in the right hemisphere wasn't being sent to the left so the left hemisphere wasn't aware what the right read and what he says after leaving the room would be different as the utterance came from the left hemisphere(who didn't get the information of the danger in the room) well that is from my understanding. u can try this game here for a better understanding i guess=) www.nobelprize.org/educational/medicine/split-brain/splitbrainexp.html
qilah sohaimi When you say: "Because he is aware of the written text" Who is he ? there is no "he" in this game anymore.
Which part of the brain is aware of the danger? I assume right brain is aware.
How could the right brain take the decision to leave the room alone ?!
Does it have control of the legs for example ?!
Does it have dominance !!
Do both brain sides have control over those decisions equally ?
To make it even more interesting:
What if the right brain reads that there is a danger in the room, while the left brain reads that he needs to stay because his favorite celebrity is coming in the room for example.
Which part of the brain will take control ?!
And will the patient (with any of the two brain sides) be able to figure out that there is contradicting info ?
the 'he' i am referring before is the same 'he' u are referring in your question ;
"For example: if HE read with his left eye Only that there is a danger in the room, will HE react and leave the
room ? or not ?"
there is still he, that is why in your question, u did ask the word 'he' too even if the hemisphere aren't intact anymore, he can still move his right body. and regarding on your new questions, i guess maybe they(the questions) can be answered based on what the patient is required to do and also depend on either his dominance; either right or left hemisphere of the patient tested.
however, i don't really meant to say that what i say now and before is correct. just sharing out my opinion and understanding. i'm still new by the way, just doing my second year in university so i wouldn't reject or feels bad if anyone wants to correct me,
Samir Mashghoul this is a great question. I know they've done a test where they showed right and left different objects and though they chose correctly, the left brain did not know why the second object was chosen and so made up a reason. Perhaps both sides are conscious but one to a lesser degree? Scary thought.
how does he read depth? the images need to be superimposed for 3D depth
I don't take shower, regularly.
I have hard time understanding others emotions.
I have trouble making eye contact.
Probably should get my corpus collesum checked.
You might be on the Asd spectrum those are all symptoms.
Probably autism
i like the music they chose... hank williams..air...sunshine of the spotless mind ..nice
This is 15 years old, an update would be cool.
This was in 2008 before we had better diagnostic tools. It looks like they're looking at broad-range autism with AGCC. I've known adults who were born with AGCC and not all of them displayed the signs that this young man does. Correlation isn't causation. I think.
Oh
What I don’t get is, if the brain is truly split, how do the eyes move in unison?
I was thinking...what if they let him write down the emotions he identifies with his left hand?
It seems like some of his answers are affirmative when he's given a leading question like: do you want to live on your own? Do you want to have a girlfriend? Etc. I wonder what his response would have been had they asked instead: do you want to stay with your parents forever? Do you want to keep being mostly alone?
I can't see out of my right eye, so if my Corpus Callosum were severed, would I lose all ability to describe what I see?
You would not be able to describe it through speaking. But someone could ask you to write it down with your left hand.
@@Crusse89 I'm a lefty :)
@@thomasjones145 If I remember right, lefties have their two brain halfs reversed. So, when they are talking about left half, for you it's the right half of your brain and vice versa.
@@olgahein4384 absolutely not? They are just left handed?!
@Thomas Jones: sorry to say, each of the 5 earlier responses to your question are inaccurate (or they make gross assumptions).
1) Each eye has a "left" and "right" field (on its retina). So your one left eye still sees a "left" and "right" side of the world in front (though you'll see slightly less of the "right side" of the world - because your nose-bridge partly blocks the full right-sided view). The "left" field-of-view from your left eye would go to your right hemisphere. The "right" field-of-view from your left eye would go to your left hemisphere. This is because each of our retinas has a "left" and "right" half, where a retinal half is sent to only our left or right cerebral hemisphere. (it's actually a little more complex - which isn't necessary for this discussion). -----> So your left and right hemispheres EACH WILL SEE, but they will see slightly different parts (of the full world in front of you) even with your single eye.
This is one in 3000 people by the way, fairly common. Consider how many students were in your school and then the population of your city to help you understand how common this is.
3000 in 8 billion is very very very rare
I find this so facinating i would love to try ot out myself, i just dont knkw if there is still an procedure that can make them remove it
I am so glad his dad and step-mom are trying so hard to help him!
The way they were explaining his personality, its making me wonder if my husband's CC has been damaged in some way: dude essentially is emotionally syunted and plays video games all the time, pretty much 0 interest in social relationships. Thats 100% my husband now, though he wasnt this bad when we met and dated. He foesnt even care to be with the kids at least.
They should have interviewed both of him, surely it feels horrible to be the half-brain that cannot speak when asked a question. they should let the one of him that can't speak write (or however) to give the "other him" a chance to express it's opinions...
The discussions about "his" behavior aren't clear - which him? The left or the right?
the right side cant answer because the speaking abillity is in the left side
@@Mokaigo the right side can probably write; if not, then maybe his left hand could've pointed at an answer.
@@sylviaxx3574 it could not write, becourse the concept of language is solely left half thing.
@@Mokaigo Right brain seem to be unable to understand language, so while it may understand emotions, it doesn't understand speech... Therefore any question asked to him is practically useless to the right side since it simply won't understand.
But I do wonder, maybe you could somehow make it show some kind of emotional response or something like that.
ua-cam.com/video/wfYbgdo8e-8/v-deo.html
For some reason I started to suspect that I have it too
And then he went on to have a successful career as the Angry Video Game Nerd.
does that mean you can play rock paper scissors with yourself
😂
Yooooo
He started to lose weight and his behavior started to change. Gut brain connection. I believe the brain 2ndary and gut is primary . If the brain is dysfunctional and people have intake of high fructose, carb diet then alter that diet research has shown new rewiring in brain function
I mean… kinda. Diet does affect the brain in the same sense that the type of oil and gas affects your car. Nutrition keeps cells healthy, including brain cells. The brain always adapts to change (like a change in diet) and is constantly rewiring itself, diet just makes that easier by keeping your cells functioning properly
He's like, thirty somthing nowadays
I Wonder how he is
I want a Toby Grobmeier where are they now
To me, those triangles and circles were just moving. I wasn't really paying much attention, but it didn't seem that deep.
Either you are trying to be nonchalant, or you are a psychopath. Neither are extremely detrimental.
You're mad
@@ethanlai1044 I am not a psychopath lol. But what does nonchalant mean?
@@Sfaegbe :(
@@LeroyW70 A bit of a IDGAF attitude.
Ok a few questions the right brain controls imagination, the left controls speech, you say the left then makes up a story. How? How does it make up a story about how it managed to get a paperclip or something like that what passed by the other hand. Even though its reasoning it has to he some form if imagination.
2 how are the eyes still in sync with eachother why don't they move independent of eachother, if they see independent of eachother.
Watching a video about sit brain and get tormented with fallout new Vegas ass music
No matter what I do I cannot escape it
ill be real my description of the triangles and circle was "idk its some shapes moving around?"
I know a harmless experiment that could possibly momentarily correct the issue.
After getsetfly's video right?
Nah but good to see you came from there
This makes no sense to me. All I saw were a triangle and a circle moving in and out of a box having a door. I didn't see any social meaning. Yet I am reasonable normal socially. I do tend to be relative more verbal and less attuned to gesture or "body language" than the average person, but not so much that I am outside the range of normalcy. I do not have any brain damage. I had head pain so I had a brain CT scan and an electroencephalogram and they did not turn up anything abnormal.
So, I noticed his eyes move in coordination. Is the movement only controlled by one half of the brain but the interpretation split? I know that there is usually a separate bridge for the eyes in the brain in addition to the corpus callosum. Is that the reason? Is that developed in people with AGCC?
Moving your body in unison and other motor functions comes from a different and more primal part of brain than hemispheres
"the big triangle is picking on the little one-" what???? they're just moving, am i the only one that thought that?
I just has an epiphany that can't be explained by words....
Yep.
Anyone interested in this area, I highly, highly recommend you check out Dr Iian Mcgilchrist - Huge new works on the topic of the Brain Hemispheres, that make a lot of this seem very dated, as it evidently is.
Thank you
One brain dominates over the other and nerve signals get passed to the right brain?
I wanna give him a hug tbh ! Life is beautiful mate, good luck ❣️🙏🏻
:)
This was bitter sweet story.
thanks for sharing this documentary! helped me a lot with my project as a med student!
Could you reconnect your corpus collosum?
스테파니 Stephanie 조셉
If we could, we would connect different brains, but i don’t think its that simple
Physically almost certainly, but we're nowhere near understanding how our brains really work. I bet we will be able to eventually.
I want that to do multitasking
I didn’t look at the animation in any social meaning.
make each eye see the same image
So wait, he does know what the emotions are and just can't verbalize them correctly, or am I completely wrong? here from Kurzgesagt and CGP to know more but oh boy am I confused
There were some really weird comments at the end of this video, so I’ll just say that social\cultural construct is a product of the mind; meaning for the purposes of this comment, that there is no “absolutism“ about it, and because it is relativistic, it is as much about what any person makes it out to be as anything else: I say this because of what I can only think to describe as the very dangerous and detrimental false social\cultural construct and the my myth of “self sufficiency“ in short, while it is true that fundamentally speaking a title is a fiction being an “adult“ has nothing to do with one’s living arrangements, or even if a person can take care of one’s self, all it really comes down to for lake of better words being developed, being mature; meaning being able to understand that one’s actions being responsible; meaning not and trying not to be doing anything that would be for lack of better words harmful, detrimental, etc. at the very least when not absolutely necessary: as well as to the best of one’s ability doing and trying to do things that are beneficial and improve things etc instead. While that definition itself is admittedly rather vague and generalist, and may even be a little too complicated in relation to what it actually is, for lack of better words at least; in general terms “that’s it“…;)
Wait what she do for him? Missed that process of therapy or i checked out...gonna watch again
10:40 Well, something he has in common with me it seems.
These parents and psychologist lady are ruthless on tony and need to chill this was hard to watch
9:56 Bro they doin him wrong, they don’t need to treat him like that
I wonder how he is now
I don't like the tone of that lady, the way he's being portrayed in the video, the way their parents talk about him. it all seems so condescending. It all reeks of "we must help him".
As a boy in early 20s myself, I sure wouldn't want help all the time. Sometimes, sure. But not always. It hinders me from exploring and making mistakes.
Also not always does a person who's alone is consciously making the choice to be left alone. It can be a by-product of timing of the situations or desired activities. Like gaming while family wants to watch tv. Or read when friends want to watch a movie. And similarly there can be times I would want to just sit and introspect my past, alone. This doesn't scream loneliness. And it's perfectly alright. No need to panic, parents.
But people asking "why" too many times sparks an unnecessary self doubt asking "am I doing something wrong". Most importantly there is no answer to these questions other than "I don't know" which kinda leaves th these questions open, creating a loop of uncertainty.
Damage done by the repeated offerings of "let me help you" is equally devastating as "why don't you let me help you".
Alright how did I end up in this infinite wormhole called the internet.
Cuz we all are-