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It doesn’t take anEinstein to recognize thatAlbertEinstein’s brain was very different from yours and mine The gray matter housed inside that shaggy head managed to revolutionize our concepts of time, space, motion — the very foundations of physical reality — not just once but several times during his astonishing career. 61)Yet while there clearly had to be something remarkable aboutEinstein’s brain, the pathologist who removed it from the great physicist’s skull after his death reported that the organ was. to all appearances, well within the normal range — no bigger or heavier than anyone else’s.

But a new analysis ofEinstein’s brain byCanadian scientists, reported in the current Lancet, reveals that it has some distinctive physical characteristics after all. 62)
A、portion of the brain that governs mathematical ability and spatial reasoning—two key ingredients to the sort of thinkingEinstein did best — was significantly larger than average and may also have had more interconnections among its ceils, which could have allowed them to work together more effectively.

In 1996,Harvey gave much of his data and a significant fraction of the tissue itself toDr Sandra Witel-son, a neuroscientist who maintains a "brain bank" at McMaster for comparative studies of brain structure and function. 63)These normal, undiseased brains, willed to science by people whose intelligence had been carefully measured before death, gave Witelson a solid set of benchmarks against which to measure the seat ofEinstein’s brilliant thoughts.
Not only wasEinstein’s inferior parietal region unusually bulky, the scientists found, but a feature called the Sylvian fissure was much smaller than average, 64)Without this groove that normally slices through the tissue, the brain cells were pecked close together, permitting more interconnections—which in principle can permit more cross-referencing of information and ideas, leading to great leaps of insight.
That’s the idea, anyway.But while it’s quite plausible according to current neurological theory, that doesn’t necessarily make it true. We knowEinstein was a genius, end we now know that his brain was physically different from the average.But none of this proves a cause-and-effect relationship. "What you really need, "says McLean’sBenes," is to look at the brains of a number of mathematical geniuses to see if the same abnormalities are present."
Even if they are, it’s possible that the bulked-brains are a result of strenuous mental exercise, not an inherent feature that makes genius possible. 65)Bottom line: we still don’t know whetherEinstein was born with an extraordinary mind or whether he earned it, one brilliant idea at a time.
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