The Functionally Divided Brain: Stroke and Di-Encephalon in the Humano-Murian
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47363/65hpy047Keywords:
Human Brain, Scan Studies, Humano-Murian, Motor Skills, Corpus CallosumAbstract
We present the case of a humano-murian victim of a left stroke who presented with impaired motor skills on the left side of his body. Brain imaging studies (Scan, Pet Scan) have shown that the brain is functionally separated into two parts. The white corners and the corpus callosum are calcified and leave almost no possibility for inter-hemispheric communication as is the case for us. Basically, the entire anatomical substrate that allows our
human brain to communicate between the two hemispheres is completely inactivated in humano-murians. It is among the latter that the term diencephalon takes on its full meaning