Who Was H.M.? Inside The Mind Of The Amnesiac Who Revolutionized Neuroscience

Wednesday, May 29, 2013 - 10:30 in Psychology & Sociology

A botched lobotomy left 27-year-old Henry Molaison unable to form new memories. This is how Molaison's personal tragedy became science's gain. My friend's father was a neurosurgeon. As a child, I had no idea what a neurosurgeon did. Years later, when I was a graduate student in the Department of Psychology at McGill University, this man reentered my life. While reading articles on memory in medical journals, I came across a report by a doctor who had performed a brain operation to cure a young man's intractable epilepsy. The operation caused the patient to lose his capacity to establish new memories. The doctor who coauthored the article was my friend's father, William Beecher Scoville. The patient was Henry. This childhood connection to Henry's neurosurgeon made reading about the "amnesic patient, H.M." more compelling. Later, when I joined Brenda Milner's laboratory at the Montreal Neurological Institute, Henry's case fell into my lap. For...

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