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Isolated brain

An isolated brain is a brain kept alive in vitro, either by perfusion or by a blood substitute, often an oxygenated solution of various salts, or by submerging the brain in oxygenated artificial cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).[1] It is the biological counterpart of brain in a vat. A related concept, attaching the brain or head to the circulatory system of another organism, is called a head transplant. An isolated brain, however, is more typically attached to an artificial perfusion device rather than a biological body.

The human brain with its lobes highlighted.

The brains of many different organisms have been kept alive in vitro for hours, or in some cases days. The central nervous system of invertebrate animals is often easily maintained as they need less oxygen and to a larger extent get their oxygen from CSF; for this reason their brains are more easily maintained without perfusion.[2] Mammalian brains, on the other hand, have a much lesser degree of survival without perfusion and an artificial blood perfusate is usually used.

For methodological reasons, most research on isolated mammalian brains has been done with guinea pigs. These animals have a significantly larger basilar artery (a major artery of the brain) compared to rats and mice, which makes cannulation (to supply CSF) much easier.

History Edit

  • 1812 – César Julien Jean Legallois (a.k.a. Legallois) put forth the original idea for resuscitating severed heads through the use of blood transfusion.[3]
  • 1818 – Mary Shelley published Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus.
  • 1836 – Astley Cooper showed in rabbits that compression of the carotid and vertebral arteries leads to death of an animal; such deaths can be prevented if the circulation of oxygenated blood to the brain is rapidly restored.[4]
  • 1857 – Charles Brown-Sequard decapitated a dog, waited ten minutes, attached four rubber tubes to the arterial trunks of the head, and injected blood containing oxygen by means of a syringe. Two or three minutes later voluntary movements of the eyes and muscles of the muzzle resumed. After cessation of oxygenated blood transfusion movements stopped.[5]
  • 1887 – Jean Baptiste Vincent Laborde made what appears to be first recorded attempt to revive the heads of executed criminals by connecting the carotid artery of the severed human head to the carotid artery of a large dog.[6] According to Laborde's account, in isolated experiments a partial restoration of brain function was attained.[6]
  • 1912 – Corneille Heymans maintained life in an isolated dog's head by connecting the carotid artery and jugular vein of the severed head to the carotid artery and jugular vein of another dog. Partial functioning in the severed head was maintained for a few hours.[7]
  • 1928 – Sergey Bryukhonenko showed life could be maintained in the severed head of a dog by connecting the carotid artery and jugular vein to an artificial circulation machine.[8][9][10]
  • 1963 – Robert J. White isolated the brain from one monkey and attached it to the circulatory system of another animal.[11]
  • 1993 – Rodolfo Llinás captured the whole brain of a guinea-pig in a fluidic profusion system in vitro which survived for around 8 hours and indicates that field potentials were very similar to those described in vivo.[12]

In philosophy Edit

In philosophy, the brain in a vat is any of a variety of thought experiments intended to draw out certain features of our ideas about knowledge, reality, truth, mind, and meaning. A contemporary version of the argument originally given by Descartes in Meditations on First Philosophy (i.e., that he could not trust his perceptions on the grounds that an evil demon might, conceivably, be controlling his every experience), the brain in a vat is the idea that a brain can be fooled into anything when fed appropriate stimuli.

The inherently philosophical idea has also become a staple of many science fiction stories, with many such stories involving a mad scientist who might remove a person's brain from the body, suspend it in a vat of life-sustaining liquid, and connect its neurons by wires to a supercomputer which would provide it with electrical impulses identical to those the brain normally receives. According to such science fiction stories, the computer would then be simulating a virtual reality (including appropriate responses to the brain's own output) and the person with the "disembodied" brain would continue to have perfectly normal conscious experiences without these being related to objects or events in the real world.

No such procedure in humans has ever been reported by a research paper in a scholarly journal, or other reliable source. Also, the ability to send external electric signals to the brain of a sort that the brain can interpret, and the ability to communicate thoughts or perceptions to any external entity by wire, is, except for very basic commands, well beyond current technology.

If the persons brain is entirely isolated from the body, on an artificial supply of oxygen, nutrients and was conscious during such experiments, the subject would be experiencing unimaginable suffering in the form of a lack of sensory stimulation.

In the event such circumstances arise and a judicial body is notified, the emphasis would be on seizure of the laboratory where such cases took place, evidence collected, medical intervention to existentially terminate the organs on grounds concerning ethical and human rights issues if they were to be found alive, and possible groundbreaking sentencing to the parties involved.

Grown Edit

In 2004 Thomas DeMarse and Karl Dockendorf made an "adaptive flight control with living neuronal networks on microelectrode arrays".[13][14]

Teams at the Georgia Institute of Technology and the University of Reading have created neurological entities integrated with a robot body. The brain receives input from sensors on the robot body and the resultant output from the brain provides the robot's only motor signals.[15][16]

In fiction Edit

The concept of a brain in a jar (or brain in a vat) is a common theme in science fiction.

Literature Edit

  • Louis Ulbach's story "Le Prince Bonifacio" (1860) features scenes about a disembodied brain.[17][18]
  • In Carl Grunert's story "Mr. Vivacius Style" (1908), the severed head of a journalist is revived in a laboratory.[19]
  • In Raymond Roussel's novel Locus Solus (1914), the tissues of Georges Danton's head reproduce the speeches he had uttered before his execution.[20]
  • In E. F. Benson' story "And the Dead Spake..." (1922), the brain of a housekipper is conected to a phonograph.[21]
  • An isolated brain gets psychic powers in the short story "The Brain in the Jar" (1924), by Norman Elwood Hammerstrom and Richard F. Searight.[22]
  • In Alexander Beliaev's novel Professor Dowell's Head (1925), Professor Dowell discovers a way of keeping heads of dead people alive and even to give them new bodies. After his death Dowell himself becomes a subject of such an experiment.[23]
  • In Guy Dent's novel Emperor of the If (1926), a isolated brain (formerly belonging to a greengrocer) have a power of create alternate realities.[24]
  • The Mi-go aliens in the Cthulhu Mythos of H. P. Lovecraft, first appearing in the story "The Whisperer in Darkness" (1931), can transport humans from Earth to Pluto (and beyond) and back again by removing the subject's brain and placing it into a "brain cylinder", which can be attached to external devices to allow it to see, hear, and speak.
  • In Edmond Hamilton's Captain Future novels series (1940), the character Prof. Simon Wright is a human brain living in a transparent case.
  • In Donovan's Brain (see term), the 1942 science fiction novel by Curt Siodmak (filmed three times in different versions: 1944, 1953 and 1962), the brain of a ruthless millionaire is kept alive in a tank where it grows to monstrous proportions and powers.
  • The final novel in C.S. Lewis's "Space Trilogy", That Hideous Strength (1945), uses the isolated brain of Francois Alcasan, an Algerian radiologist guillotined for murder, as a plot device. At some point in the novel, it is revealed that Alcasan's artificially-perfused head is used to allow evil intelligence to communicate with humans directly.
  • In Roald Dahl's short story "William and Mary" (1960), after William's death his brain is kept alive on an artificial heart.[25]
  • In Madeleine L'Engle's novel A Wrinkle in Time (1963), the character IT is a disembodied telepathic brain that dominates the planet of Camazotz.
  • In Cordwainer Smith's short novel The Boy Who Bought Old Earth (1963, also published as The Planet Buyer, and later included in the longer novel Norstrilia in 1975), the protagonist Rod McBan is "scunned": his head is pickled, his body dehydrated and freeze-dried, and all reconstituted at his destination, for transit via interstellar economy class.
  • The Ruinators, later known as the Demiurges, are the immensely cyborgized alien society in Humans as Gods, the 1966–1977 sci-fi trilogy by Sergey Snegov. They use the isolated brains of the highly intelligent species Galaxians as the organic supercomputers in charge of the Metrics Stations, the primary and most secret military defense structure of the Ruinators' Empire. The brains are being extracted from the prisoners' babies and grown artificially in the spheres filled with the nutrient liquid. Among the most important characters of the second and third novels comes the Brain of the Third Planet, later known as Vagrant or Voice, who has somehow developed self-consciousness and later rebelled against the Ruinators. Due to the Vagrant's fervent desire for a life of those embodied, the Brain has been surgically put into a dragon's body, whose inherent brain was destroyed in a recent battle. Vagrant enjoyed a sentient dragon's life for a few decades after that, until the body grew too senile, and on the threshold of the dragon's death the brain was removed again to assume control over a starship.[25]
  • In the 1971 novel Gray Matters by William Hjortsberg, the protagonist and his acquaintances are all disembodied brains, preserved underground after a nuclear war.
  • In the Legends of Dune prequel trilogy to the novel Dune, cymeks are disembodied brains that wear robotic bodies.
  • In the P. C. Jersild novel A Living Soul a human brain is living in an aquarium, and is a subject of medical experiments

Television Edit

 
A monstrous brain in a jar, in a poster for The Brain That Wouldn't Die
  • The Outer Limits episode "The Brain of Colonel Barham" details the story of a dying astronaut, Colonel Barham. It is decided to separate his brain from his body and keep it alive, with neural implants connecting it to visual and audio input/output for the mission. But without a body, the brain becomes extremely powerful and megalomaniacal.
  • Isolated brains also appear in The Wild Wild West. In the episode "The Night of the Druid's Blood", one of James West's old tutors is killed and West discovers that it is Dr Tristam who has removed the brains from the bodies and is forcing them to work for him. Finally West manages to communicate to the isolated brains that if they all work together they can destroy Dr Tristam and have peace.
  • Isolated brains also appeared in Star Trek. In the episode "The Gamesters of Triskelion", the Providers are disembodied brains that kidnap individuals in order to force them to fight against each other. Later, in the episode "Spock's Brain", Mr. Spock's brain is removed by a native of the Sigma Draconis system in order to serve as the Eymorg Controller. Due to Vulcan physiology, Spock's body remains alive. The crew of the Enterprise follow an ion trail to Sigma Draconis VI where, using the knowledge of the Eymorg, Dr. Leonard McCoy is able to restore Spock's brain to his body.
  • In the 1970s Doctor Who serial The Brain of Morbius, Solon, an authority on micro-surgical techniques, transplants Morbius's brain into an artificial translucent brain cylinder casing. Additionally, in the modern Doctor Who series (2005–present), the recurring antagonists known as the Cybermen are presented as human brains (in one instance, an entire human head) encased in mechanical exoskeletons, connected by an artificial nervous system; this is ostensibly done as an "upgrade" from the comparatively fragile human body to a far more durable and longer-lasting shell. Another group of modern Doctor Who foes, the Toclafane, were revealed to be human heads encased in flying, weaponized spheres, the final forms of humans from the far future who turned to desperate measures in order to survive the conditions of the impending heat death of the universe. In the Doctor Who episodes "The End of the World" and "New Earth", Lady Cassandra is an isolated brain attached to a canvas of skin with a face.
  • The Wonder Woman episode "Gault's Brain" features the classic "brain in a vat".
  • Observer from Mystery Science Theater 3000 carries his brain in a Petri dish.
  • The science fantasy television series LEXX includes a robot head containing human brain tissue. Also whenever the current Divine Shadow body dies his brain is removed and placed in a device that allows him to speak and kept with rest of the Divine Predecessors.
  • In the animated series Futurama, numerous technological advances have been made by the 31st century. The ability to keep heads alive in jars was invented by Ron Popeil (who has a guest cameo in "A Big Piece of Garbage") and also apparently Dick Clark of Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve fame still doing the countdown in the year 2999, has resulted in many political figures and celebrities being active; this became the writers' excuse to feature and poke fun at celebrities in the show. In "The Day the Earth Stood Stupid" the Big Brain, an isolated brain and leader of the Brainspawn, is outwitted by Fry. The brain's disciples have been attempting to dumb down every lifeform they meet to enable them to steal all the universe's data and hoard it in the infosphere.[25]
  • In the animated series Evil Con Carne, the main character Hector Con Carne was reduced to a brain and a stomach in two jars. Both of them are able to move and talk, even without jars. Hector's brain sometimes controls the bear Boskov while Hector's stomach digests parts of Boskov's food.
  • The 2011 web series The Mercury Men features a brain in a jar[26] ("The Battery") that can communicate telepathically and over a walkie-talkie-like devices and is revealed to control the "mercury men" for a catastrophic plan to destroy Earth.[27][28]

Film Edit

  • In the science fiction comedy film The Man with Two Brains, the protagonist, a pioneering neurosurgeon, falls in love with a disembodied brain that was able to communicate with him telepathically.
  • In the movie Blood Diner, two cannibal brothers bring their uncle's (isolated) brain back to life to help them in their quest to restore life to the five-million-year-old goddess Shitaar. Their uncle's brain instructs them to collect the required parts to resurrecting Shitaar – virgins, assorted body parts, and the ingredients for a "blood buffet".
  • In RoboCop 2, the brain, eyes, and much of the nervous system of the Detroit drug lord Cain is harvested by OCP officials to use in their plans for an upgraded "RoboCop 2" cyborg. These systems are stored in a vat shortly after the surgery, where the disembodied Cain can still see the remains of his former body being discarded before being placed into the fitted robotic skeleton.
  • The mad scientist in the French film The City of Lost Children has a "brain in a vat" for a companion.
  • In the movie Crank: High Voltage, Ricky Verona's head is kept alive in a tank so that he can watch his brother kill their enemy.
  • The movie Pacific Rim Uprising has a brain kept alive through artificial means as a way for new Jaeger pilots to practice drifting.

Comics Edit

Anime and manga Edit

  • Many people in the Ghost in the Shell manga and anime franchise possess cyberbrains, which can sustain a modified human brain within a cybernetic body indefinitely.
  • One of the main antagonists in the anime series Psycho-Pass, the Sibyl System, is a secret organization of former criminals who, upon joining the group, had their brains surgically removed from their bodies and placed inside glass containers in an underground complex, from where they were able to surveil the country's citizens.

Video games Edit

  • In the Fallout series of games, isolated brains are used to control robots called "Robobrains".[25] In the Old World Blues downloadable content for the video game Fallout: New Vegas a group of scientists, dubbed the "Think Tank", have a more advanced version of the technology.
  • The video game Cortex Command revolves around the idea of brains being separated from physical bodies, and used to control units on a battlefield.
  • The Mother Brain from the game Metroid.[25]
  • In Streets of Rage 3, Mr. X is now a brain in a jar that fights by controlling a robot named Robot Y, known as Neo X in the Japanese version.
  • In The Evil Within, the brain of Ruvik, the antagonist of the game, is removed and placed in vitro suspension in order to operate STEM.

Other Edit

  • A brainship is a fictional concept of an interstellar starship. A brainship is made by inserting the disembodied brain and nervous system or malformed body of a human being into a life-support system, and connecting it surgically to a series of computers via delicate synaptic connections (a brain–computer interface). The brain "feels" the ship (or any other connected peripherals) as part of its own body. An example, The Ship Who Sang (1969) short story collection by science fiction author Anne McCaffrey is about the brainship Helva. "Mr. Spaceship" (1959) is an earlier story by Philip K. Dick about a brainship.
  • The B'omarr Monks, of the Star Wars Universe, would surgically remove their brains from their bodies and continue their existence as a brain in a jar. They believe that cutting themselves off from civilization and all corporeal distractions leads to enlightenment. In Return of the Jedi, one such monk is the spider-like creature that walks past C-3PO as he enters Jabba's Palace.[29]
  • Krang from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.[25]
  • The Advanced Dungeons & Dragons game supplement Monstrous Compendium MC15: Ravenloft Appendix II: Children of the Night (1993) features Rudolph Von Aubrecker, a living brain and villain character. The idea was republished as brain in a jar in the third edition Libris Mortis (2004)[30] and fourth edition in Open Grave (2009) D&D books. Tyler Linn of Cracked.com identified the brain-in-a-jar as one of "15 Idiotic Dungeons and Dragons Monsters" in 2009, humorously stating: "...It's a brain in a jar. Fuck, just kick it over, who's going to know?"[31] The elder brains, directing force of the illithid race in the game, are also gigantic disembodied brains with powerful psionic powers floating in a tank.[32]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Halbach O (Mar 1999). "The isolated mammalian brain: an in vivo preparation suitable for pathway tracing". Eur J Neurosci. 11 (3): 1096–100. doi:10.1046/j.1460-9568.1999.00543.x. PMID 10103102. S2CID 84209376.
  2. ^ Luksch H, Walkowiak W, Muñoz A, ten Donkelaar HJ (Dec 1996). "The use of in vitro preparations of the isolated amphibian central nervous system in neuroanatomy and electrophysiology". J Neurosci Methods. 70 (1): 91–102. doi:10.1016/S0165-0270(96)00107-0. PMID 8982986. S2CID 14604807.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Google Scholar:("Le Gallois" OR Legallois) 1812
  4. ^ Holmes R. L.; Wolstencroft J. H. (1959). "Accessory sources of blood supply to the brain of the cat". J Physiol. 148 (1): 93–107. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1959.sp006275. PMC 1363110. PMID 14402794.
  5. ^ Brown-Sequard C (1858). "Recherches expérimentales sur les propriétés physiologique et les usages du sang rouge et du sang noir et de leurs principaux éléments gazeux, l'oxygène et l'acide carbonique". Journal de la Physiologie l'Homme et des Animaux. 1: 95–122. 353–367, 729–735.
  6. ^ a b Sam Boykin. "So you're dead. now what? Things That Can Happen To Your Body After You're Gone". Creative Loafing Atlanta. Retrieved April 2, 2012.
  7. ^ Heymans' biography
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-01-21. Retrieved 2010-12-14.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-02-08. Retrieved 2006-03-06.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-01-29. Retrieved 2011-08-25.
  11. ^ Pace, Eric (November 25, 1998). "Vladimir P. Demikhov, 82, Pioneer in Transplants, Dies". New York Times.
  12. ^ Mühlethaler, M.; de Curtis, M.; Walton, K.; Llinás, R. (1993-07-01). "The Isolated and Perfused Brain of the Guinea-pig In Vitro". European Journal of Neuroscience. 5 (7): 915–926. doi:10.1111/j.1460-9568.1993.tb00942.x. ISSN 1460-9568. PMID 8281302. S2CID 2097145.
  13. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2009-11-08.
  14. ^ Brain in a dish acts as autopilot, living computer, Science Daily. 22 October 2004.
  15. ^ D. Xydas; D. Norcott; K. Warwick; B. Whalley; S. Nasuto; V. Becerra; M. Hammond; J. Downes; S. Marshall (March 2008). "Architecture for Neuronal Cell Control of a Mobile Robot". European Robotics Symposium 2008. European Robotics Symposium 2008. Vol. 44. Prague: Springer. pp. 23–31. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-78317-6_3. ISBN 978-3-540-78315-2.
  16. ^ "Rise of the rat-brained robots", New Scientist. 13 August 2008.
  17. ^ "SFE: Ulbach, Louis". sf-encyclopedia.com.
  18. ^ Halper, Nick (30 June 2020). "Brain Computer Interfaces: The essential role of science fiction". The Startup.
  19. ^ Krementsov, Nikolai (June 2009). "Off with your heads: isolated organs in early Soviet science and fiction". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences. 40 (2): 87–100. doi:10.1016/j.shpsc.2009.03.001. PMC 2743238. PMID 19442924.
  20. ^ Tresch, John (June 2004). "In a solitary place: Raymond Roussel's brain and the French cult of unreason". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences. 35 (2): 307–332. doi:10.1016/j.shpsc.2004.03.009.
  21. ^ Bleiler, E. F. (1990). Science-fiction, the early years. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-87338-416-2.
  22. ^ Bleiler, E. F. (1990). Science-fiction, the early years. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. p. 338. ISBN 978-0-87338-416-2.
  23. ^ Bleiler, E. F. (1990). Science-fiction, the early years. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. p. 46. ISBN 978-0-87338-416-2.
  24. ^ Bleiler, E. F. (1990). Science-fiction, the early years. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. pp. 191–192. ISBN 978-0-87338-416-2.
  25. ^ a b c d e f "The Top 5 Fictional Characters That Are Literally Just Brains". 2015-06-12. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  26. ^ Weprin, Alex (21 January 2011). "Syfy Picks Up Original Web Series 'The Mercury Men'". Retrieved 16 July 2015.
  27. ^ "The Mercury Men Are Here". needcoffee.com. 2011-09-12. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
  28. ^ Hall, Randy (2012-02-03). "The Mercury Men". fanfilmfollies.com. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
  29. ^ "THE 7 CREEPIEST, FREAKIEST DENIZENS OF JABBA'S PALACE". 2015-07-23. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  30. ^ Collins, Andy and Bruce R Cordell. (Wizards of the Coast, 2004)
  31. ^ Linn, Tyler (October 28, 2017). "The 15 Most Idiotic Monsters In Dungeons & Dragons History". Cracked.com. Retrieved February 5, 2022.
  32. ^ Baird, Scott (May 20, 2018). "Dungeons & Dragons: 10 Most Powerful (And 10 Weakest) Monsters, Ranked". Screen Rant. Retrieved February 14, 2022.

Further reading Edit

  • Fleming, Chet (February 1988). If We Can Keep a Severed Head Alive...Discorporation and U.S. Patent 4,666,425. Polinym Press. ISBN 978-0-942287-02-8.
  • Librizzi L; Janigro D; De Biasi S; de Curtis M (Oct 2001). "Blood–brain barrier preservation in the in vitro isolated guinea pig brain preparation". J Neurosci Res. 66 (2): 289–97. doi:10.1002/jnr.1223. PMID 11592126. S2CID 30194806.
  • Mazzetti S; Librizzi L; Frigerio S; de Curtis M; Vitellaro-Zuccarello L (Feb 2004). "Molecular anatomy of the cerebral microvessels in the isolated guinea-pig brain". Brain Res. 999 (1): 81–90. doi:10.1016/j.brainres.2003.11.032. PMID 14746924. S2CID 9746606.
  • Mühlethaler M; de Curtis M; Walton K; Llinás R (Jul 1993). "The isolated and perfused brain of the guinea-pig in vitro". Eur J Neurosci. 5 (7): 915–26. doi:10.1111/j.1460-9568.1993.tb00942.x. PMID 8281302. S2CID 2097145.
  • Kerkut GA (1989). "Studying the isolated central nervous system; a report on 35 years: more inquisitive than acquisitive". Comp Biochem Physiol A. 93 (1): 9–24. doi:10.1016/0300-9629(89)90187-4. PMID 2472918.
  • Llinás R; Yarom Y; Sugimori M (Jun 1981). "Isolated mammalian brain in vitro: new technique for analysis of electrical activity of neuronal circuit function". Fed Proc. 40 (8): 2240–5. PMID 7238908.

isolated, brain, also, organ, bath, isolated, organ, perfusion, technique, isolated, brain, brain, kept, alive, vitro, either, perfusion, blood, substitute, often, oxygenated, solution, various, salts, submerging, brain, oxygenated, artificial, cerebrospinal, . See also Organ bath and Isolated organ perfusion technique An isolated brain is a brain kept alive in vitro either by perfusion or by a blood substitute often an oxygenated solution of various salts or by submerging the brain in oxygenated artificial cerebrospinal fluid CSF 1 It is the biological counterpart of brain in a vat A related concept attaching the brain or head to the circulatory system of another organism is called a head transplant An isolated brain however is more typically attached to an artificial perfusion device rather than a biological body The human brain with its lobes highlighted The brains of many different organisms have been kept alive in vitro for hours or in some cases days The central nervous system of invertebrate animals is often easily maintained as they need less oxygen and to a larger extent get their oxygen from CSF for this reason their brains are more easily maintained without perfusion 2 Mammalian brains on the other hand have a much lesser degree of survival without perfusion and an artificial blood perfusate is usually used For methodological reasons most research on isolated mammalian brains has been done with guinea pigs These animals have a significantly larger basilar artery a major artery of the brain compared to rats and mice which makes cannulation to supply CSF much easier Contents 1 History 2 In philosophy 3 Grown 4 In fiction 4 1 Literature 4 2 Television 4 3 Film 4 4 Comics 4 5 Anime and manga 4 6 Video games 4 7 Other 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingHistory Edit1812 Cesar Julien Jean Legallois a k a Legallois put forth the original idea for resuscitating severed heads through the use of blood transfusion 3 1818 Mary Shelley published Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus 1836 Astley Cooper showed in rabbits that compression of the carotid and vertebral arteries leads to death of an animal such deaths can be prevented if the circulation of oxygenated blood to the brain is rapidly restored 4 1857 Charles Brown Sequard decapitated a dog waited ten minutes attached four rubber tubes to the arterial trunks of the head and injected blood containing oxygen by means of a syringe Two or three minutes later voluntary movements of the eyes and muscles of the muzzle resumed After cessation of oxygenated blood transfusion movements stopped 5 1887 Jean Baptiste Vincent Laborde made what appears to be first recorded attempt to revive the heads of executed criminals by connecting the carotid artery of the severed human head to the carotid artery of a large dog 6 According to Laborde s account in isolated experiments a partial restoration of brain function was attained 6 1912 Corneille Heymans maintained life in an isolated dog s head by connecting the carotid artery and jugular vein of the severed head to the carotid artery and jugular vein of another dog Partial functioning in the severed head was maintained for a few hours 7 1928 Sergey Bryukhonenko showed life could be maintained in the severed head of a dog by connecting the carotid artery and jugular vein to an artificial circulation machine 8 9 10 1963 Robert J White isolated the brain from one monkey and attached it to the circulatory system of another animal 11 1993 Rodolfo Llinas captured the whole brain of a guinea pig in a fluidic profusion system in vitro which survived for around 8 hours and indicates that field potentials were very similar to those described in vivo 12 In philosophy EditIn philosophy the brain in a vat is any of a variety of thought experiments intended to draw out certain features of our ideas about knowledge reality truth mind and meaning A contemporary version of the argument originally given by Descartes in Meditations on First Philosophy i e that he could not trust his perceptions on the grounds that an evil demon might conceivably be controlling his every experience the brain in a vat is the idea that a brain can be fooled into anything when fed appropriate stimuli The inherently philosophical idea has also become a staple of many science fiction stories with many such stories involving a mad scientist who might remove a person s brain from the body suspend it in a vat of life sustaining liquid and connect its neurons by wires to a supercomputer which would provide it with electrical impulses identical to those the brain normally receives According to such science fiction stories the computer would then be simulating a virtual reality including appropriate responses to the brain s own output and the person with the disembodied brain would continue to have perfectly normal conscious experiences without these being related to objects or events in the real world No such procedure in humans has ever been reported by a research paper in a scholarly journal or other reliable source Also the ability to send external electric signals to the brain of a sort that the brain can interpret and the ability to communicate thoughts or perceptions to any external entity by wire is except for very basic commands well beyond current technology If the persons brain is entirely isolated from the body on an artificial supply of oxygen nutrients and was conscious during such experiments the subject would be experiencing unimaginable suffering in the form of a lack of sensory stimulation In the event such circumstances arise and a judicial body is notified the emphasis would be on seizure of the laboratory where such cases took place evidence collected medical intervention to existentially terminate the organs on grounds concerning ethical and human rights issues if they were to be found alive and possible groundbreaking sentencing to the parties involved Grown EditIn 2004 Thomas DeMarse and Karl Dockendorf made an adaptive flight control with living neuronal networks on microelectrode arrays 13 14 Teams at the Georgia Institute of Technology and the University of Reading have created neurological entities integrated with a robot body The brain receives input from sensors on the robot body and the resultant output from the brain provides the robot s only motor signals 15 16 In fiction EditThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Isolated brain news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The concept of a brain in a jar or brain in a vat is a common theme in science fiction Literature Edit Louis Ulbach s story Le Prince Bonifacio 1860 features scenes about a disembodied brain 17 18 In Carl Grunert s story Mr Vivacius Style 1908 the severed head of a journalist is revived in a laboratory 19 In Raymond Roussel s novel Locus Solus 1914 the tissues of Georges Danton s head reproduce the speeches he had uttered before his execution 20 In E F Benson story And the Dead Spake 1922 the brain of a housekipper is conected to a phonograph 21 An isolated brain gets psychic powers in the short story The Brain in the Jar 1924 by Norman Elwood Hammerstrom and Richard F Searight 22 In Alexander Beliaev s novel Professor Dowell s Head 1925 Professor Dowell discovers a way of keeping heads of dead people alive and even to give them new bodies After his death Dowell himself becomes a subject of such an experiment 23 In Guy Dent s novel Emperor of the If 1926 a isolated brain formerly belonging to a greengrocer have a power of create alternate realities 24 The Mi go aliens in the Cthulhu Mythos of H P Lovecraft first appearing in the story The Whisperer in Darkness 1931 can transport humans from Earth to Pluto and beyond and back again by removing the subject s brain and placing it into a brain cylinder which can be attached to external devices to allow it to see hear and speak In Edmond Hamilton s Captain Future novels series 1940 the character Prof Simon Wright is a human brain living in a transparent case In Donovan s Brain see term the 1942 science fiction novel by Curt Siodmak filmed three times in different versions 1944 1953 and 1962 the brain of a ruthless millionaire is kept alive in a tank where it grows to monstrous proportions and powers The final novel in C S Lewis s Space Trilogy That Hideous Strength 1945 uses the isolated brain of Francois Alcasan an Algerian radiologist guillotined for murder as a plot device At some point in the novel it is revealed that Alcasan s artificially perfused head is used to allow evil intelligence to communicate with humans directly In Roald Dahl s short story William and Mary 1960 after William s death his brain is kept alive on an artificial heart 25 In Madeleine L Engle s novel A Wrinkle in Time 1963 the character IT is a disembodied telepathic brain that dominates the planet of Camazotz In Cordwainer Smith s short novel The Boy Who Bought Old Earth 1963 also published as The Planet Buyer and later included in the longer novel Norstrilia in 1975 the protagonist Rod McBan is scunned his head is pickled his body dehydrated and freeze dried and all reconstituted at his destination for transit via interstellar economy class The Ruinators later known as the Demiurges are the immensely cyborgized alien society in Humans as Gods the 1966 1977 sci fi trilogy by Sergey Snegov They use the isolated brains of the highly intelligent species Galaxians as the organic supercomputers in charge of the Metrics Stations the primary and most secret military defense structure of the Ruinators Empire The brains are being extracted from the prisoners babies and grown artificially in the spheres filled with the nutrient liquid Among the most important characters of the second and third novels comes the Brain of the Third Planet later known as Vagrant or Voice who has somehow developed self consciousness and later rebelled against the Ruinators Due to the Vagrant s fervent desire for a life of those embodied the Brain has been surgically put into a dragon s body whose inherent brain was destroyed in a recent battle Vagrant enjoyed a sentient dragon s life for a few decades after that until the body grew too senile and on the threshold of the dragon s death the brain was removed again to assume control over a starship 25 In the 1971 novel Gray Matters by William Hjortsberg the protagonist and his acquaintances are all disembodied brains preserved underground after a nuclear war In the Legends of Dune prequel trilogy to the novel Dune cymeks are disembodied brains that wear robotic bodies In the P C Jersild novel A Living Soul a human brain is living in an aquarium and is a subject of medical experimentsTelevision Edit nbsp A monstrous brain in a jar in a poster for The Brain That Wouldn t DieThe Outer Limits episode The Brain of Colonel Barham details the story of a dying astronaut Colonel Barham It is decided to separate his brain from his body and keep it alive with neural implants connecting it to visual and audio input output for the mission But without a body the brain becomes extremely powerful and megalomaniacal Isolated brains also appear in The Wild Wild West In the episode The Night of the Druid s Blood one of James West s old tutors is killed and West discovers that it is Dr Tristam who has removed the brains from the bodies and is forcing them to work for him Finally West manages to communicate to the isolated brains that if they all work together they can destroy Dr Tristam and have peace Isolated brains also appeared in Star Trek In the episode The Gamesters of Triskelion the Providers are disembodied brains that kidnap individuals in order to force them to fight against each other Later in the episode Spock s Brain Mr Spock s brain is removed by a native of the Sigma Draconis system in order to serve as the Eymorg Controller Due to Vulcan physiology Spock s body remains alive The crew of the Enterprise follow an ion trail to Sigma Draconis VI where using the knowledge of the Eymorg Dr Leonard McCoy is able to restore Spock s brain to his body In the 1970s Doctor Who serial The Brain of Morbius Solon an authority on micro surgical techniques transplants Morbius s brain into an artificial translucent brain cylinder casing Additionally in the modern Doctor Who series 2005 present the recurring antagonists known as the Cybermen are presented as human brains in one instance an entire human head encased in mechanical exoskeletons connected by an artificial nervous system this is ostensibly done as an upgrade from the comparatively fragile human body to a far more durable and longer lasting shell Another group of modern Doctor Who foes the Toclafane were revealed to be human heads encased in flying weaponized spheres the final forms of humans from the far future who turned to desperate measures in order to survive the conditions of the impending heat death of the universe In the Doctor Who episodes The End of the World and New Earth Lady Cassandra is an isolated brain attached to a canvas of skin with a face The Wonder Woman episode Gault s Brain features the classic brain in a vat Observer from Mystery Science Theater 3000 carries his brain in a Petri dish The science fantasy television series LEXX includes a robot head containing human brain tissue Also whenever the current Divine Shadow body dies his brain is removed and placed in a device that allows him to speak and kept with rest of the Divine Predecessors In the animated series Futurama numerous technological advances have been made by the 31st century The ability to keep heads alive in jars was invented by Ron Popeil who has a guest cameo in A Big Piece of Garbage and also apparently Dick Clark of Dick Clark s New Year s Rockin Eve fame still doing the countdown in the year 2999 has resulted in many political figures and celebrities being active this became the writers excuse to feature and poke fun at celebrities in the show In The Day the Earth Stood Stupid the Big Brain an isolated brain and leader of the Brainspawn is outwitted by Fry The brain s disciples have been attempting to dumb down every lifeform they meet to enable them to steal all the universe s data and hoard it in the infosphere 25 In the animated series Evil Con Carne the main character Hector Con Carne was reduced to a brain and a stomach in two jars Both of them are able to move and talk even without jars Hector s brain sometimes controls the bear Boskov while Hector s stomach digests parts of Boskov s food The 2011 web series The Mercury Men features a brain in a jar 26 The Battery that can communicate telepathically and over a walkie talkie like devices and is revealed to control the mercury men for a catastrophic plan to destroy Earth 27 28 Film Edit In the science fiction comedy film The Man with Two Brains the protagonist a pioneering neurosurgeon falls in love with a disembodied brain that was able to communicate with him telepathically In the movie Blood Diner two cannibal brothers bring their uncle s isolated brain back to life to help them in their quest to restore life to the five million year old goddess Shitaar Their uncle s brain instructs them to collect the required parts to resurrecting Shitaar virgins assorted body parts and the ingredients for a blood buffet In RoboCop 2 the brain eyes and much of the nervous system of the Detroit drug lord Cain is harvested by OCP officials to use in their plans for an upgraded RoboCop 2 cyborg These systems are stored in a vat shortly after the surgery where the disembodied Cain can still see the remains of his former body being discarded before being placed into the fitted robotic skeleton The mad scientist in the French film The City of Lost Children has a brain in a vat for a companion In the movie Crank High Voltage Ricky Verona s head is kept alive in a tank so that he can watch his brother kill their enemy The movie Pacific Rim Uprising has a brain kept alive through artificial means as a way for new Jaeger pilots to practice drifting Comics Edit More Fun Comics 62 Dec 1940 had the Spectre battle a human brain in a vat that had developed enormous powers and become mobile and sprouted an arm Adventures of Superman Annual 1 1987 had the inhabitants of Trudeau South Dakota reduced to disembodied brains by the Word Bringer Anime and manga Edit Many people in the Ghost in the Shell manga and anime franchise possess cyberbrains which can sustain a modified human brain within a cybernetic body indefinitely One of the main antagonists in the anime series Psycho Pass the Sibyl System is a secret organization of former criminals who upon joining the group had their brains surgically removed from their bodies and placed inside glass containers in an underground complex from where they were able to surveil the country s citizens Video games Edit In the Fallout series of games isolated brains are used to control robots called Robobrains 25 In the Old World Blues downloadable content for the video game Fallout New Vegas a group of scientists dubbed the Think Tank have a more advanced version of the technology The video game Cortex Command revolves around the idea of brains being separated from physical bodies and used to control units on a battlefield The Mother Brain from the game Metroid 25 In Streets of Rage 3 Mr X is now a brain in a jar that fights by controlling a robot named Robot Y known as Neo X in the Japanese version In The Evil Within the brain of Ruvik the antagonist of the game is removed and placed in vitro suspension in order to operate STEM Other Edit A brainship is a fictional concept of an interstellar starship A brainship is made by inserting the disembodied brain and nervous system or malformed body of a human being into a life support system and connecting it surgically to a series of computers via delicate synaptic connections a brain computer interface The brain feels the ship or any other connected peripherals as part of its own body An example The Ship Who Sang 1969 short story collection by science fiction author Anne McCaffrey is about the brainship Helva Mr Spaceship 1959 is an earlier story by Philip K Dick about a brainship The B omarr Monks of the Star Wars Universe would surgically remove their brains from their bodies and continue their existence as a brain in a jar They believe that cutting themselves off from civilization and all corporeal distractions leads to enlightenment In Return of the Jedi one such monk is the spider like creature that walks past C 3PO as he enters Jabba s Palace 29 Krang from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 25 The Advanced Dungeons amp Dragons game supplement Monstrous Compendium MC15 Ravenloft Appendix II Children of the Night 1993 features Rudolph Von Aubrecker a living brain and villain character The idea was republished as brain in a jar in the third edition Libris Mortis 2004 30 and fourth edition in Open Grave 2009 D amp D books Tyler Linn of Cracked com identified the brain in a jar as one of 15 Idiotic Dungeons and Dragons Monsters in 2009 humorously stating It s a brain in a jar Fuck just kick it over who s going to know 31 The elder brains directing force of the illithid race in the game are also gigantic disembodied brains with powerful psionic powers floating in a tank 32 See also EditSimulated reality Locked in syndromeReferences Edit Halbach O Mar 1999 The isolated mammalian brain an in vivo preparation suitable for pathway tracing Eur J Neurosci 11 3 1096 100 doi 10 1046 j 1460 9568 1999 00543 x PMID 10103102 S2CID 84209376 Luksch H Walkowiak W Munoz A ten Donkelaar HJ Dec 1996 The use of in vitro preparations of the isolated amphibian central nervous system in neuroanatomy and electrophysiology J Neurosci Methods 70 1 91 102 doi 10 1016 S0165 0270 96 00107 0 PMID 8982986 S2CID 14604807 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Google Scholar Le Gallois OR Legallois 1812 Holmes R L Wolstencroft J H 1959 Accessory sources of blood supply to the brain of the cat J Physiol 148 1 93 107 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1959 sp006275 PMC 1363110 PMID 14402794 Brown Sequard C 1858 Recherches experimentales sur les proprietes physiologique et les usages du sang rouge et du sang noir et de leurs principaux elements gazeux l oxygene et l acide carbonique Journal de la Physiologie l Homme et des Animaux 1 95 122 353 367 729 735 a b Sam Boykin So you re dead now what Things That Can Happen To Your Body After You re Gone Creative Loafing Atlanta Retrieved April 2 2012 Heymans biography Sergej Sergejewitsch Brychonenko Archived from the original on 2007 01 21 Retrieved 2010 12 14 Museum of Cardiovascular Surgery Archived from the original on 2006 02 08 Retrieved 2006 03 06 Karta sajta Archived from the original on 2007 01 29 Retrieved 2011 08 25 Pace Eric November 25 1998 Vladimir P Demikhov 82 Pioneer in Transplants Dies New York Times Muhlethaler M de Curtis M Walton K Llinas R 1993 07 01 The Isolated and Perfused Brain of the Guinea pig In Vitro European Journal of Neuroscience 5 7 915 926 doi 10 1111 j 1460 9568 1993 tb00942 x ISSN 1460 9568 PMID 8281302 S2CID 2097145 Thomas DeMarse Karl Dockendorf Adaptive flight control with living neuronal networks on microelectrode arrays PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2009 11 08 Brain in a dish acts as autopilot living computer Science Daily 22 October 2004 D Xydas D Norcott K Warwick B Whalley S Nasuto V Becerra M Hammond J Downes S Marshall March 2008 Architecture for Neuronal Cell Control of a Mobile Robot European Robotics Symposium 2008 European Robotics Symposium 2008 Vol 44 Prague Springer pp 23 31 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 78317 6 3 ISBN 978 3 540 78315 2 Rise of the rat brained robots New Scientist 13 August 2008 SFE Ulbach Louis sf encyclopedia com Halper Nick 30 June 2020 Brain Computer Interfaces The essential role of science fiction The Startup Krementsov Nikolai June 2009 Off with your heads isolated organs in early Soviet science and fiction Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 40 2 87 100 doi 10 1016 j shpsc 2009 03 001 PMC 2743238 PMID 19442924 Tresch John June 2004 In a solitary place Raymond Roussel s brain and the French cult of unreason Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 35 2 307 332 doi 10 1016 j shpsc 2004 03 009 Bleiler E F 1990 Science fiction the early years Kent Ohio Kent State University Press p 55 ISBN 978 0 87338 416 2 Bleiler E F 1990 Science fiction the early years Kent Ohio Kent State University Press p 338 ISBN 978 0 87338 416 2 Bleiler E F 1990 Science fiction the early years Kent Ohio Kent State University Press p 46 ISBN 978 0 87338 416 2 Bleiler E F 1990 Science fiction the early years Kent Ohio Kent State University Press pp 191 192 ISBN 978 0 87338 416 2 a b c d e f The Top 5 Fictional Characters That Are Literally Just Brains 2015 06 12 Retrieved 26 July 2016 Weprin Alex 21 January 2011 Syfy Picks Up Original Web Series The Mercury Men Retrieved 16 July 2015 The Mercury Men Are Here needcoffee com 2011 09 12 Retrieved 16 July 2015 Hall Randy 2012 02 03 The Mercury Men fanfilmfollies com Retrieved 16 July 2015 THE 7 CREEPIEST FREAKIEST DENIZENS OF JABBA S PALACE 2015 07 23 Retrieved 26 July 2016 Collins Andy and Bruce R Cordell Wizards of the Coast 2004 Linn Tyler October 28 2017 The 15 Most Idiotic Monsters In Dungeons amp Dragons History Cracked com Retrieved February 5 2022 Baird Scott May 20 2018 Dungeons amp Dragons 10 Most Powerful And 10 Weakest Monsters Ranked Screen Rant Retrieved February 14 2022 Further reading EditFleming Chet February 1988 If We Can Keep a Severed Head Alive Discorporation and U S Patent 4 666 425 Polinym Press ISBN 978 0 942287 02 8 Librizzi L Janigro D De Biasi S de Curtis M Oct 2001 Blood brain barrier preservation in the in vitro isolated guinea pig brain preparation J Neurosci Res 66 2 289 97 doi 10 1002 jnr 1223 PMID 11592126 S2CID 30194806 Mazzetti S Librizzi L Frigerio S de Curtis M Vitellaro Zuccarello L Feb 2004 Molecular anatomy of the cerebral microvessels in the isolated guinea pig brain Brain Res 999 1 81 90 doi 10 1016 j brainres 2003 11 032 PMID 14746924 S2CID 9746606 Muhlethaler M de Curtis M Walton K Llinas R Jul 1993 The isolated and perfused brain of the guinea pig in vitro Eur J Neurosci 5 7 915 26 doi 10 1111 j 1460 9568 1993 tb00942 x PMID 8281302 S2CID 2097145 Kerkut GA 1989 Studying the isolated central nervous system a report on 35 years more inquisitive than acquisitive Comp Biochem Physiol A 93 1 9 24 doi 10 1016 0300 9629 89 90187 4 PMID 2472918 Llinas R Yarom Y Sugimori M Jun 1981 Isolated mammalian brain in vitro new technique for analysis of electrical activity of neuronal circuit function Fed Proc 40 8 2240 5 PMID 7238908 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Isolated brain amp oldid 1179864853, wikipedia, wiki, 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