The brain preserves maps of missing hands for years

The brain holds space for a missing limb, even years after it’s gone.

For three women who underwent planned hand amputations, brain scans revealed remarkably durable maps of hand areas, lasting for five years in one case. The results, published August 21 in Nature Neuroscience, counter the long-held idea that the adult brain remakes itself in prominent ways after a change to the body, such as an amputation.

Earlier research, much of it on rodents and nonhuman primates, suggested that after a limb was gone, the brain’s real estate shifts. It was thought that the brain area that used to receive input from a missing hand would be taken

→ Continue reading at Science News

More from author

Related posts

Advertisment

Latest posts

A ‘ringing’ black hole matches scientists’ predictions

Senior physics writer Emily Conover has a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Chicago. She is a two-time winner of the D.C....