SUPERIOR TEMPORAL SULCUS (STS) The topmost of two horizontal furrows, or sulci, in the
SUPRAMARGINAL GYRUS An evolutionarily recent gyrus that split off from the
SYMPATHETIC NERVOUS SYSTEM A branch of the
SYNAPSE A gap between two neurons that functions as the site of information transfer from one neuron to another.
SYNESTHESIA A condition in which a person literally perceives something in a sense besides the sense being stimulated, such as tasting shapes or seeing colors in sounds or numbers. Synesthesia is not just a way of describing experiences as a writer might use metaphors; some synesthetes actually experience the sensations.
SYNTAX Word order that enables compact representation of complex meaning for communicative intent; loosely synonymous with grammar. In the sentence “The man who hit John went to the car,” we recognize instantly that “the man” went to the car, not John. Without syntax we could not arrive at this conclusion.
TEMPORAL LOBE One of the four major subdivisions (the others being
TEMPORAL LOBE EPILEPSY (TLE)
THALAMUS A structure consisting of two egg-shaped masses of nerve tissue, each about the size of a walnut, deep within the brain. The thalamus is the key “relay station” for sensory information, transmitting and amplifying only information of particular importance from the mass of signals entering the brain.
THEORY OF MIND The idea that humans and some higher primates can construct a model in their brains of the thoughts and intentions of other people. The more accurate the model, the more accurately and rapidly the person can predict the other person’s thoughts, beliefs, and actions. The idea is that there are specialized brain circuits in human (and some apes’) brains that allow for theory of mind. Uta Frith and Simon Baron-Cohen have suggested that autistic children may have a deficient theory of mind, which complements our view that a dysfunction of
WERNICKE’S AREA A brain region responsible for the comprehension of language and the production of meaningful speech and writing.
“WHAT” STREAM The
NOTES
PREFACE
1. I have since learned that this observation has resurfaced from time to time, but for obscure reasons isn’t part of mainstream oncology research. See, for example, Havas (1990), Kolmel et al. (1991), or Tang et al. (1991).
INTRODUCTION: NO MERE APE
1. This basic method for studying the brain is how the whole field of behavioral neurology got started back in the nineteenth century. The major difference between then and now is that in those days there was no brain imaging. The doctor had to wait around for a decade or three for the patient to die, then dissect his brain.
2. In contrast to the hobbits, African pigmies, who are also extraordinarily short, are modern humans in every way, from their DNA right on up through their brains, which are the same size as those of all other human groups.
CHAPTER 2 SEEING AND KNOWING