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Man's brain incurs disgusting loss.


After a stroke damaged parts of his brain, a 25-year-old man lost much of his ability to experience disgust, according to a report in the November NATURE NEUROSCIENCE. The specific brain areas damaged in the stroke process all sorts of sensory and social cues for disgust, contends a team led by neuroscientist Andrew J. Calder of the MRC Cognition cognition /cog·ni·tion/ (kog-nish´un) that operation of the mind process by which we become aware of objects of thought and perception, including all aspects of perceiving, thinking, and remembering.cog´nitive

cog·ni·tion (k
 and Brain Sciences Unit in Cambridge, England.

Prior studies had implicated these brain areas, the insula
1. an islandlike structure.
2. a triangular area of the cerebral cortex forming the floor of the lateral cerebral fossa.


in·su·la (n
 and putamen putamen /pu·ta·men/ (pu-ta´men) the larger and more lateral part of the lentiform nucleus.

pu·ta·men (py-t
, only in perceiving facial expressions of disgust.

The brain-damaged 1. brain-damaged - [generalisation of "Honeywell Brain Damage" (HBD), a theoretical disease invented to explain certain utter cretinisms in Honeywell Multics] Obviously wrong; cretinous; demented. There is an implication that the person responsible must have suffered brain damage, because he should have known better. man, called NK by the researchers, displayed average intelligence and good vision and hearing. Calder's group compared his performance on emotion-recognition tests with that of 20 adults with uninjured brains.

When shown pictures of faces expressing various emotions--anger, contempt, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, and surprise--NK erred frequently only in identifying instances of disgust .NK also failed to recognize nonverbal sounds that trigger disgust, such as retching retching /retch·ing/ (rech´ing) strong involuntary effort to vomit., whereas he usually identified sounds linked to other emotions, such as laughter for happiness.

NK understands the concept of disgust, the researchers note. For instance, he knows that certain pictures, such as an image of a filthy toilet, provoke the emotion of disgust in others. However, he reports a much milder experience of disgust in reaction to descriptions of disgust-provoking situations--eating chocolate shaped like feces feces /fe·ces/ (fe´sez) [L.] waste matter discharged from the intestine.

fe·ces (fs
 or seeing a dead body, for example--than the adults without brain damage brain damage
n.
Injury to the brain that is caused by various conditions, such as head trauma, inadequate oxygen supply, infection, or intracranial hemorrhage, and that may be associated with a behavioral or functional abnormality.
 do.
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Article Details
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Author:B.B.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 9, 2000
Words:230
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