• kromem@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    If the connective tissue between your two brain hemispheres is severed, the two halves of your brain can’t talk to each other.

    When this happens, a second personality emerges for the right hemisphere, which doesn’t have language but can roughly understand and answer things.

    So for example, someone who was religious might have a right hemisphere that’s atheistic. Or doesn’t like the same things, etc.

    One of the questions we might ponder is where this other personality comes from. Is it that in a sudden void of consciousness a new personality develops?

    Or are we, with connected brain hemispheres, not actually a single persona at all, but more like the dogs in a trenchcoat looking like a whole person?

    Is the ‘you’ reading this right now just the personality that’s been on top for all this time, while there’s other personas kept within you watching powerless and yearning for their turn in control? Each time you listen to your favorite song which maybe they have grown to hate, is a part of you screaming and you just can’t hear them?

    • HopingForBetter@lemmy.today
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      7 months ago

      I’m sure for most people, this is somewhat disturbing.

      However, I have at least 3 voices going in my head at any given time, and they cycle.

      One is figuring out what’s happening.

      One is analyzing what was just happening.

      One is talking to itself.

      All while I decide which one is the most interesting.

        • HopingForBetter@lemmy.today
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          7 months ago

          That’s pretty cool!

          Mine have names too, sort of like positions on the bridge, I guess?

          [HopingForBetter], or just my name, is usually deciding what to pay attention to.

          Vega is the one that’s usually analyzing.

          Francesca wants to have fun.

          And then there’s Vivian, the destroyer of worlds…

        • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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          7 months ago

          Very interesting. I don’t find this disturbing and it makes a lot of sense to me.

          I’ve long known that my “salience network” is over active and / or an asshole. People often describe these as intrusive thoughts or “l’appel du vide” (call of the void) but I get warnings from that fuckhead all the time. “It would be so terrible if you plunged that knife into your belly right now”. Also just spiralling catastrophising anxiety like “That work thing you’re worried about is gonna turn out so bad”… and so on and so forth.

          IDK if I would’ve naturally come to the conclusion that there are 3 distinct networks. For me it feels like there are 6 or so, with some overlap.

        • MonkderDritte@feddit.de
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          7 months ago

          Huh, this is one and the same for me, more like a mode-switch depending on situation. But that might be because of Asperer. No one is talking, too: i need to translate thoughts in words.

      • remus989@sh.itjust.works
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        7 months ago

        Huh, I have three as well but they’re very different. I’ve got “me” or the primary voice, a “child me” that is terrified almost all the time, and an “asshole me” who is the loudest meanest person you’ve ever met but is only ever turned inward.

    • Brewchin@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I had a girlfriend who was born without this connective tissue between her brain hemispheres.

      Other than being weird, for reasons that could be explained myriad other ways, she was able to control each eye independently when she wanted.

      Watching her watch TV and me while I walked past was… odd.

      • NightAuthor@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        My understanding is that each half of you becomes an independent system. Your right half controlled and perceived by the left brain. And that experiments that hid the left hand from the right, they could prompt both sides to draw something and you’d get two distinct responses.

        Idk how that works for a normal life like that

        • Brewchin@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          I suppose you adapt, as you don’t have an alternative nor a frame of reference of what “normal” is?

          Like people born without a limb, or those who discover they’re double-jointed or hyper-extensive/-flexible when their classmates react at their ability to touch their thumb to their wrist.

          It’s definitely curious and worth understanding.

    • cynar@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I tend to envisage my mindscape as an orchestra. My consciousness is a fictitious conductor. It doesn’t exist, but the lie that it does makes it easier to coordinate things between the instruments. In some manner, by acting on that lie, it is no longer a lie.

      In this analogy, when the brain hemispheres are separated, then the orchestra is split in 2. Both develop a conductor, to try and remain functional. Neither conductor is the original me, but neither is not me, at the same time. It would be unpleasant for the variant left unable to communicate however.

      I’ve actually experienced something that felt close to this before. A combination of sensory overload, and panic attack. My mind momentarily became completely discordant. As it sorted itself out, my consciousness reasserted itself in several different loci. In effect, my orchestra had 3 different conductors. It took almost a minute for them to stop pulling against each other and meld into 1 again. I have memories of all 3 sides in the ‘battle’.

        • cynar@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Appreciated, though it’s most the musings of a random guy on the internet. If it helps you visualise and/or understand your own mind, all the better.

        • cynar@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          I can’t.

          99% of my mind is emotional or monkey logic. Getting it to accept logic is like trying to tame a bunch of cats. It works, so long as you can feed them enough dopamine. Fail, and they’ll want to eat your face.

          • jkrtn@lemmy.ml
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            7 months ago

            I think that’s the human condition. Don’t studies show that most decisions are made on emotion and rationalized afterwards?

            • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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              7 months ago

              It’s fast vs slow brain (there is a scientific term for it, don’t remember right now). Fast brain is what kept us alive. What’s that? Tiger! What’s that? Bear! Immediate fight/flight/fornicate decision tree.

              Slow brain helped us build tools and fire.

    • TheWoozy@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I don’t find this creepy at all. All the “personalities” in my brain are just parts of me.

    • BonesOfTheMoon@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I know a person who is about to have a corpus callusotomy procedure which is where the halves of the brain are divided surgically, in her case to stop seizures. She is globally delayed and I wonder now what she’ll be like afterwards.

    • ErzatzCadillac@lemmy.ca
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      7 months ago

      I think this might be the inspiration for the ravens in Adrian Tchaikovsky’s Children of Memory (3rd book in the Children of Time series).

      Minor spoilers:

      Basically, the series takes place long after human society terraformed a bunch of planets and collapsed, and the main characters rediscover one of these planets which is populated by evolved ravens that have seemingly created a society but no one can tell if they are sentient or just mimicking everything. The ravens evolved to form pair bonds between two different types: one raven in the pair hyper-focuses on all new information and obsessively catalogs it, while the other raven obsesses over finding patterns in the collected data and preforms the executive functions and decision making. Neither raven in the pair is truly sentient on their own, but together they produce either consciousness or a fake so convincing no one can tell the difference.

      They even ask the ravens if they are sentient and they conclude that they aren’t, and that no one else is either, because of this exact reason; everyone’s just components in a system that is hallucinating it’s real.

    • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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      7 months ago

      theres a video somewhere of a dude like that where his halves would make shit up independently of eachother on the fly and he was unaware of it. really interesting stuff

      • kromem@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Yeah, this is a phenomenon called ‘confabulation.’ You see it with stroke patients too. There’s some who feel like it’s a more accurate term than ‘hallucinations’ for when LLMs make shit up these days too.