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Saturday, 10 March, 2001, 08:31 GMT
Unlocking the brain's potential
![]() Dustin Hoffman and real life savant Stephen Wiltshire
Scientists think they have identified the part of the brain, which if switched off, can stimulate artistic genius, a BBC documentary shows.
The discovery was made after studying people with autism and dementia, but an Australian scientist believes ordinary people may one day be able to "tap in" and allow them at least a moment of genius. And in recent tests, five volunteers found their abilities were improved after the particular area of the brain was temporarily "switched off". Fragments of Genius explores the amazing talents of people like Stephen Wiltshire, an autistic man who has an incredible ability to draw buildings in specific and accurate detail after seeing them just once In the 1988 film Rain Man, Dustin Hoffman portrayed Raymond, an autistic savant with brilliant maths skills.
Experts have been unable to explain why people have these talents. But now two scientists have identified an area of the brain which they think may hold the key. Dr Bruce Miller, a dementia specialist at the University of California in San Francisco, found some of his patients were developing artistic talents. After scanning them, he found they had all had problems in the same part of the brain - the left arterial temporal lobe. He found the same part of the brain was damaged in an American savant, Dane Bottino, an 11-year-old with artistic talents. Allan Snyder, professor of science at the Australian National University, University of Sydney and director of Centre for the Mind, has also been looking at why savants have such amazing talents, when they are so severely disabled in other ways. He says that everyone may be able to tap into the area of the brain that gives savants these abilities. His theory is that because a specific part of the brain does not work properly, abilities in another area may be unlocked. Brain malfunction And he says the savants have their gifts, because of this "malfunction" of the brain, not in spite of it.
"They are exceptional in that they can tap in and somehow we can't. They have privileged access." And he said if ordinary people could also find a way to get access: "Each of us could draw like a professional, do lightning fast arithmetic." This malfunctioning may, he believes, enable them to access certain "primitive" parts of the brain which process sound, vision and numbers. In the BBC programme, Stephen Wiltshire is taken up in a helicopter over London. Hours later, he produces a detailed and accurate drawing of a four-square mile area of the city. The scientists believe this is possible because instead of his brain processing details of information, such as identifying a building or recognising it, he can tune in to all the complex mental processes that lie behind that recognition, and copy them. A team from Flinders University in Adelaide, Australia, recently used the findings of Miller and Snyder to run their own tests which found "savant skills" - memory, maths and art - improved in five out of 17 volunteers, supporting Professor Snyder's theory. The scientists used transcranial magnetic stimulation, a technique used in the treatment of depression. It was used to switch off the frontal temporal lobe. The volunteers were tested before, during and after the treatment. The five showed improvements in calendar calculating - naming what day of the week any date in recent history was on - and drawing abilities. Fragments of Genius, BBC1, 11 March at 1940 GMT |
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