Page:Principles of Psychology (1890) v1.djvu/73

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FUNCTIONS OF THE BRAIN.
53

result in a dog of Luciani's, even from bilateral destruction of both temporal lobes in their entirety.[1]

Fig. 16.—Luciani's Hearing Region.

In the monkey, Ferrier and Yeo once found permanent deafness to follow destruction of the upper temporal convolution (the one just below the fissure of Sylvius in Fig. 6) on both sides. Brown and Schaefer found, on the contrary, that in several monkeys this operation failed to noticeably affect the hearing. In one animal, indeed, both entire temporal lobes were destroyed. After a week or two of depression of the mental faculties this beast recovered and became one of the brightest monkeys possible, domineering over all his mates, and admitted by all who saw him to have all his senses, including hearing, 'perfectly acute.'[2] Terrible recriminations have, as usual, ensued between the investigators, Ferrier denying that Brown and Schaefer's ablations were complete,[3] Schaefer that Ferrier's monkey was really deaf.[4] In this unsatisfactory condition the subject must be left, although there seems no reason to doubt that Brown and Schaefer's observation is the more important of the two.

In man the temporal lobe is unquestionably the seat of the hearing function, and the superior convolution adjacent to the sylvian fissure is its most important part. The phenomena of aphasia show this. We studied motor aphasia a few pages back; we must now consider sensory aphasia.


  1. Die Functions-Localization, etc., Dog X; see also p. 161.
  2. Philos. Trans., vol. 179, p. 312.
  3. Brain, vol. XI. p. 10.
  4. Ibid. p. 147.