Facing a Bumpy History
The much-maligned theory of phrenology gets a tip of the hat from modern neuroscience
- By Minna Morse
- Smithsonian magazine, October 1997, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
According to Antonio Damasio, a neuroscientist at the University of Iowa College of Medicine, the phrenologists were, in many ways, "quite astounding" for their time. "However, they did not understand that even the areas we have identified — quite different from their 'organs' — are interdependent parts of larger 'brain systems.'" Damasio, who studies the effects of lesions in the brain, believes he has located an area in the prefrontal cortex that is part of a system crucial to controlling inappropriate behavior and considering the emotional repercussions of one's actions. One of the most dramatic cases he has studied provides a suggestive link between 19th-century phrenology and modern neuroscience.
It involves a New England railroad worker named Phineas Gage who, in 1848, suffered an amazing accident: an iron bar, more than an inch in diameter, was thrust by an explosion through his brain, entering his head under his cheekbone and exiting at the top of his skull. That he lived was astounding; even more remarkable, his reasoning and language were left entirely intact. What changed, however, was his temperament. Previously a responsible, gentle man, Gage was now argumentative, irresponsible and prone to cursing so vilely that women were warned not to remain in his presence.
Using Gage's actual skull as a guide, Damasio and his wife, Hanna, a fellow neuroscientist, recently created a 3-D computer image of Gage's injury. The bar's trajectory, they found, had damaged the same region of the brain as had been injured in patients of theirs who exhibited similar behavior.
Back in 1848, the diagnosis was only somewhat different. Along with all the doctors and journalists who came to observe him, Gage was visited by Nelson Sizer, a phrenology expert and associate of the Fowlers.
The meeting provides further evidence that faulty logic can sometimes lead to correct conclusions. After comparing Gage's exit wound with his phrenological charts, Sizer determined — and accurately, no doubt- that Gage's change in demeanor, his violence and rudeness, were due not to damage in the prefrontal cortex but to an injury "in the neighborhood of Benevolence and the front part of Veneration."
By Minna Morse
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Comments (2)
While Gage is undoubtedly the dividing line between phrenology and the neuroscience of the modern age, the accounts of his rage and profanity are probably exaggerated.
If he had been as belligerent as later accounts described, they'd have simply institutionalized him. Instead, he went on to hold several jobs that required interaction with other people on a daily basis.
(Frankly, though, if I'd been through what he survived, I'd probably be profane once in a while myself. Who could blame him?)
Posted by Mike Spurlock on October 20,2009 | 06:33 PM
I found this artical to be a fascinating historical documentation of phrenology. I was intrigued by the detail and lives of each of those involved in the development and discipline of this science. Thank you Minna Morse for such an incredibly well researched piece of history made available to persons such as myself who continue to study the field os psychology. Respectfully, Debra O'Neill- Forensic Psychology
Posted by Debra O'Neill on July 16,2008 | 10:32 AM