What happens to the self when the brain is split in two?
Are we as unified as we feel?

What happens to the self when the brain is split in two?

Where do our decisions come from? It's an odd question. Where else could they come from but from our own heads? If pressed to get more specific, we likely think of the "self" - a single decision-maker, residing in our heads, commanding our choices. This makes intuitive sense, but how does this work when the mind is split in two?


The brain is a hyperconnected organ, and ordinarily, the brain's two hemispheres are in constant conversation, sharing information through the band of fibers known as the corpus callosum. In rare circumstances, however, this band of fibers connecting the hemispheres is surgically severed.


The surgery leaves the person with two distinct sides of the brain that are unable to communicate. Observations of this clinical population known as split-brain patients, provide a fascinating glimpse into the science of the self. They force us to confront these intuitions about a unified sense of identity, and a centralized decision-maker.?


“Who” is actually making the decision?


The Science of Decision-Making


Here’s where the neuroscience comes in. Unable to communicate, one hemisphere often takes action based on information that the other doesn't have access to. For example, you can selectively instruct the right hemisphere to get up and talk to the kitchen. But when you ask the person, "why did you get up?" only the language dominant left hemisphere has the linguistic capability to respond.?


The left hemisphere has no idea. But what's interesting is that the person never just says, "I don't know." Instead, without hesitation, it makes up a reason on the spot, "Oh, I just felt like stretching up my legs a bit, that's all," or "Oh, I wanted to look out the window."?


?The 'decision' is made independent of the left hemisphere's knowledge, and once it's acted upon, the left hemisphere interprets and explains away this action, as if it was its own.?Michael Gazzaniga, perhaps the world's leading expert in split-brain patients, dubs this phenomenon, "The Interpreter." It's as if one entity makes a decision, and the other explains it.?


Two selves in the same head?


It's easy to see this behavior as nonsensical. However, 'the interpreter' isn't limited to split-brain patients. It's often true of us all.?


Consider the following scenario. You're shown an array of stockings hanging on a wall, and asked to pick which ones you like the best. You scan the collection and make your selection. After, you're asked why you picked these particular stockings. You respond with whatever comes to mind: the color, the quality of the fabric, the design, or any such combination.?


This was the set-up for the famous experiment by Richard Nisbett and Timothy Wilson. They found that participants are actually much more likely to choose the stockings on the far right of the array. Even when stockings are identical, the ones on the right are chosen with alarming regularity.?


However, when asked why they made this decision, nobody ever says, "I just picked the ones on the right". Like the ignorant left hemisphere, we're blind to this factor. Instead, we make up an explanation to justify it after the fact.?We interpret our behavior in a way that makes it seem like a logical decision all along, when in fact, our true motivations are unknown. As NYU psychologist Jonathan Haidt describes, "The conscious mind thinks it's the Oval Office, when in reality it's the press office."?


Everyday life is full of these examples. Think about the role of "the interpreter" in the enforcement of children's bedtimes, as Kevin Simler and Robin Hanson describe in The Elephant Brain:?

Parents will often enforce kids' bedtimes "for their own good," when a self-serving motive seems just as likely—that parents simply want an hour or two of peace and quiet without the kids. Of course, many parents genuinely believe that bedtimes are good for their children, but that belief is self-serving enough that we should be skeptical that it's the full story.?

How many more of our "choices" have unknown, ulterior motives, which we explain away once they are made??


Final Thoughts on The Two Selves


Its human nature to think highly of ourselves. We like to think of ourselves as rational actors, making deliberative, well-thought-out decisions. But more often than we think, we don't utilize these rational abilities to make choices. Instead, we use them to rationalize the choice.?


To the question of where exactly our decisions come from, it may be impossible to reply truthfully. True motivations can be elusive, and our decision-making apparatus is opaque. But one thing is certain: Even when the brain is entirely intact, the source of our decisions is a much less unified place than we assume.


Even when we're convinced that we're deciding, we may just be interpreting.?




?? by Laurenz Kleinheider via Unsplash

This post also appears on the human nature blog, Neuroscience Of

Olga Magnusson EMBA

Senior Executive Fellow @ The Digital Economist | Executive MBA | Responsible AI | Digital Transformation | Innovation | Systems Thinking | Hult Alumni Ambassador | Lifelong learner | Passionately curious

11 个月

Fascinating!

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Matt Johnson, PhD的更多文章

  • The Surprising Ways to Use Anger as an Asset

    The Surprising Ways to Use Anger as an Asset

    He was only 6 foot 1, but his physical presence filled every room. When his face turned to rage, it was pure and…

  • Wabi Sabi and The Gift of Imperfection

    Wabi Sabi and The Gift of Imperfection

    Imagine you're a professional cello player, set to perform solo at a world-class auditorium. You walk on stage to an…

  • What Bookstores Teach us About The Future of Retail

    What Bookstores Teach us About The Future of Retail

    Imagine where the following URL would take you: Relentless(dot)com. What kind of website do you think this is? If it’s…

    11 条评论
  • What Doom Tourism teaches us about Modern Business

    What Doom Tourism teaches us about Modern Business

    The statues of Easter Island are as iconic as they are mysterious. Erected over 600 hundred years ago, they also…

    2 条评论
  • The Nature of Travel

    The Nature of Travel

    Few movies capture the spirit of travel like 2000’s The Beach. It tells the story of a young American traveler (played…

    6 条评论
  • The Power of Names & Faces in Marketing

    The Power of Names & Faces in Marketing

    Michael Jackson’s Man in the Mirror urges that if we want to change the world, we have to start with the person in the…

    3 条评论
  • The Hidden Psychology Behind our Love of Movies

    The Hidden Psychology Behind our Love of Movies

    In 1987, a group of moviegoers watched a movie which was never shown again. The reason? This particular audience said…

    3 条评论
  • Can we Perceive the Minds of the Dead?

    Can we Perceive the Minds of the Dead?

    How do we relate to the dead? It’s a large question to unpack, but the answer will depend on how you see the…

    4 条评论
  • The Brain Science Behind Perceiving the Dead

    The Brain Science Behind Perceiving the Dead

    Imagine a life where you never have to lift a finger. Everything is done for you.

    3 条评论
  • What TikTok shares with Capgras Delusion

    What TikTok shares with Capgras Delusion

    On an summer morning in 1994, David woke up with a stranger in the house. When he went into the kitchen for breakfast…

    2 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了