As a baby, Daniel cried constantly and banged his head against the wall. His parents were frantic but all doctors could suggest was that he was understimulated. One afternoon when he was four, an accident changed the way Daniel thought forever. While playing with his brother in the living room he suffered a series of epileptic seizures which transformed his brain chemistry, giving him the gift of synaesthesia.
This condition occurs when the parts of the brain responsible for different areas of perception get mixed up. Brain scans of autistic savants suggest that the right hemisphere might be compensating for damage in the left hemisphere. While many savants struggle with language and comprehension - skills associated primarily with the left hemisphere - they often have amazing skills in mathematics and memory - primarily right hemisphere skills. Daniel began to respond emotionally to numbers, which he started to ‘see’ as complex, beautiful shapes and textures.
2 comments:
V.S Ramachandran is awesome!
I know, he's good that Ramachandran.
There was some stuff about autism in this one that left me wanting to know a little more, having asperger syndrome myself. Synesthesia is common among autistics. It's usually being able to taste shapes and colors, or hear colors. Autism is where bits of the brain are communicating along unusual pathways.
For a while, I thought Daniel might be an aspie too, the need to be repetitively rocked and all... But maybe he's not. And I think I read somewhere that Kim might not have autism but something else, while still being a savant.
This is one of the best ever. I love it.
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