Finding
One's 'Self'
Damage to Brain Lobe Changes Personality,
Study Finds
By Willow Lawson, ABC News
May 8 , 2001 — Scientists have
pinpointed a key area of the brain that appears to govern
personality, including one's religious, social and political
beliefs, and even style of dress, according to a new study.
The section of the brain was isolated after studying a group
of 72 people suffering from a rare degenerative disorder similar
to Alzheimer's disease called frontotemporal dementia. Damage
to the right frontal lobe of the brain by the disease creates
radical changes in the identities of the patients, according
to the study.
"We think of our 'self' —
including our beliefs and values and even the way we dress
— as something we determine, not just an anatomical
process," Bruce Miller, a neurologist at the University
of California, San Francisco and author of the study, said
in a statement. "But this research shows that one area
of the brain controls much of our sense of self, and damage
to that area can dramatically change who we are."
Miller presents the findings today
at the American Academy of Neurology's annual meeting in Philadelphia.
Miller began investigating the anatomy of the self after noticing
that patients with frontotemporal dementia, which usually
strikes people in their 50s, made dramatic changes in their
life.
"One woman was a charming, dynamic
real estate agent who went from wearing expensive designer
apparel to choosing cheap clothing" Miller said. "Her
preference for fine dining in French restaurants turned into
a love of fast food." Another patient, a 40-year-old
man, sold his business and moved from job to job.
"At home he went from being tight-fisted
and short-tempered to relaxed and easy-going," Miller
said. His views on sex had been conservative, but they became
tolerant and experimental, Miller said.
Of the 72 individuals studied, seven
patients had a dramatic change of self. Of that group, six
had the most serious abnormalities in the brain's right frontal
lobe. The seventh patient had problems elsewhere in the brain,
but the most severe were in the right frontal lobe.
"This suggests that normal functioning
of the right frontal lobe is necessary for people to maintain
their sense of self," Miller said. Biological disorder
not only affects behavior, but can destroy patterns of self
awareness, he said.
Miller told The Associated Press that
scientists didn't yet understand why the right frontal lobe
is so important to the sense of self.
"This
is a kind of mysterious area in the brain," he said.
"The question is why in this non-language area do we
see a loss of self concepts. And the answer is: We don't know." |