Data: 2009-12-03 07:42:17 | |
Autor: Me | |
The Science Revolution : CONTERREVOLUTION BIASED IN FAVOUR OF THE INJURIOUS AT TIMES BRAIN IMPLANTS IS FOGGING THE SCIENCE | |
Dissection Begins on Famous Brain
Published: December 2, 2009 SAN DIEGO — The man who could not remember has left scientists a gift that will provide insights for generations to come: his brain, now being dissected and digitally mapped in exquisite detail. The man, Henry Molaison — known during his lifetime only as H.M., to protect his privacy — lost the ability to form new memories after a brain operation in 1953, and over the next half century he became the most studied patient in brain science. HE HAS INJURY AND / OR BLOCK Just after noon on Wednesday, on the first anniversary of Mr. Molaison’s death at 82 from pulmonary complications, Dr. Annese and fellow neuroscientists began painstakingly slicing their field’s most famous organ. The two-day process will produce about 2,500 tissue samples for analysis. THIS IS A MAJOR FACTOR NOW HOW HIS BRAIN OPERATED AND CONFOUNDING ENOUGH THAT THE INFERE NCES SOUGHT ARE DEAD NOW. WHAT ARE YOPU ALL DOING THERE. AFTER ONE TRY AT PRINCETON BY BUSHLAND , NOW NYU ASSISTANT pROFESSOR OF ALL WILL BE GIVING CHIPS LEGITIMACY! (and all believe alredy, i migght presume) we have enough innsight binto the living brain and we have the metodologocal; accumen to check how memory operaties - it surely is not double personality/ performer. That old , too old for escience now assumption need not to be used when looking into the living memory operation. Case might show structural injury, but that one ndoes not explain whole memory or how the medn adjusted. ..... I WOULD DARE TO CLASSIFY THIS NOISE AS SCIENCE FRAUD. |
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