首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
When a Brain Forgets Where Memory Is Every so often, seemingly normal people suddenly walk out of their lives and disappear,
When a Brain Forgets Where Memory Is Every so often, seemingly normal people suddenly walk out of their lives and disappear,
admin
2013-08-12
37
问题
When a Brain Forgets Where Memory Is
Every so often, seemingly normal people suddenly walk out of their lives and disappear, with no clue of who they are, where they are from or what their previous life was like. It is the stuff of fiction, but it happens in real life too.
Last year a Westchester County lawyer—a 57-year-old husband and father of two, Boy Scout leader and churchgoer—left the garage near his office and disappeared. Six months later he was found living under a new name in a homeless shelter in Chicago, not knowing who he was or where he came from.
Library searches and contact with the Chicago police did not help the man. His true identity was uncovered through an anonymous tip to "America’s Most Wanted." But when he was contacted by his family, he had no idea who they were.
On the fictional side is a play called "Fugue(神游症)," now on stage at the Cherry Lane Theater in New York. In it, a woman found wandering homeless in Chicago is interviewed by a psychiatrist. She does not know her name and can recall nothing about her life before landing in Chicago. The rest of this most interesting play by Leonora Thuna is an exploration of a rare but intriguing emotional disorder, known technically as dissociative fugue or dissociative amnesia(失忆症).
A Sudden Change
People with this problem suddenly and unexpectedly take leave of their usual physical surroundings and embark on a journey that can last as little as a few hours or as long as several months. During the fugue state, individuals completely lose their identity, later assuming a new one. They don’t know their real names or anything about their former lives, and they do not recognize friends or family. They may not even remember how they got to where they are.
While loss of memory can occur for many reasons, dissociative fugue has no direct physical or medical cause. Rather, it is caused by a severe stress or emotionally traumatic(创伤的)event that is so painful the mind seems to shut down and erase everything, like a failed computer hard drive.
But unlike a computer whose unsaved information is lost forever, most if not all patients suffering from dissociative fugue eventually recover their memories, typically just as suddenly as the memories disappeared.
While in the fugue state, people are unaware that their identity and memory have been lost, said David Schacter, professor of psychology at Harvard. They wander off, often traveling far from home. It is only when they are forced to reveal some piece of biographical information that they realize they do not know who they are, which may lead to a desperate search to uncover their identity.
In a telling case detailed by Berton Roueche first in The New Yorker and later his book "The Medical Detectives, Volume II" more than a half-century ago, a man who felt increasingly trapped in his father-in-law’s business one day failed to show up at the store in Boston and later found himself in New York. Not until he had to provide his name for a hotel did he discover he did not know who he was.
After many failed attempts to uncover his identity, his past revealed itself while he was being quizzed by a doctor at Bellevue Hospital, he recalled. "All of a sudden, I knew, I remembered. I jumped up and shouted. I yelled, ’I know—I can remember! I remember my wife’s name. It’s Mildred. We live in Boston. I can even tell you the address. And my name is Uhlan. Walter Uhlan.’"
A Diagnostic Challenge
Elkhonon Goldberg, clinical professor of neurology at New York University and the author of three books on the human mind, says that some underlying neurological problem is the usual cause of amnesia When amnesia has a physical basis, memory loss is usually not complete, but rather covers a part of someone’s life. The more recent memories are often lost, while memories of more distant events are preserved.
When examining a patient with memory loss that has no obvious physical cause, the first step, Dr. Goldberg said, is to look for a neurological cause like a head injury, or a stroke. In such cases, in addition to incomplete memory loss, there is usually a loss of individual facts like biographical information. However, when memory loss includes generic knowledge about whole classes of things, like how many wings birds have, the underlying cause is more likely to be psychogenic(心理上的), Dr. Goldberg said.
When amnesia has an organic cause, people’s memories of who they are usually are not disrupted, Dr. Schacter said. Nor are memories usually lost of events that occurred before the physical problem. But such people may be unable to form new memories.
And sometimes cases of fugue have a psychological cause along with some form of underlying brain damage that is revealed, say, through a functional M.R.I, or PET scan, according to Morris Moscovitch, a psychologist at the University of Toronto.
Another challenge clinicians face in diagnosing amnesia, Dr. Schacter said, is to differentiate between genuine cases of lost memory and the man-made amnesia of "false patients"—people who are fleeing financial problems, for example, who have committed a crime or who simply wish to gain bad fame. Neuropsychological tests performed by experts can often spot the false patients who may do so poorly on certain tests that they are obviously faking their answers.
Other checks for pretending to be sick include assessing whether patients are making a genuine effort to answer questions correctly and whether there are apparent motives for pretending they do not know who they are.
Misplaced Files
In the case of the Westchester lawyer, who had lost all memory of his former life, his wife provided background information suggesting that his amnesia may have resulted from prolonged post-traumatic stress. He was a Vietnam War veteran who happened to have walked between the twin towers of the World Trade Center on Sep. 11, 2001, minutes before the first plane hit. He subsequently experienced a return of painful memories of his war experience and required treatment for depression.
The playwright, Leonora Thuna, was first attracted to the subject of fugue after seeing an article in The Los Angeles Times. An attractive woman was picked up by the police after she was found wandering the streets of Los Angeles with no idea of who she was or how she got there. After her picture appeared in the paper, her family recognized her and came to get her, but when they arrived she had no idea who they were, either.
Similar cases have occurred elsewhere, like the 40-year-old man from Olympia, Wash., who somehow made his way to Denver, where he wandered the streets alone and confused until he finally asked doctors and the police to help him discover his identity.
In researching fugue states, Ms. Thuna learned something reassuring: "You never lose your memory. It’s always there. It just falls out of the file cabinet."
In Berton Roueche’s telling case, the man restored his memory ______.
选项
A、all in a sudden after many failures
B、in the guidance of the doctor
C、when he was checking in at a hotel
D、when given him his name as a clue
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/WD97777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Afewyearsagoitwasfashionabletospeakofagenerationgap,adivisionbetweenyoungpeopleandtheirelders.Parentscompl
Nowadays,somethinghasgoneterriblywrongwithouronce-proudAmericanwayoflife.Ithashappenedintheareaof【C1】______.
Nowadays,somethinghasgoneterriblywrongwithouronce-proudAmericanwayoflife.Ithashappenedintheareaof【C1】______.
Researchcarriedoutinrecentopinionpollsshowsthat______.Accordingtothepassage,asemploymentbecameadominantform
Roadcourtesyisgoodsensebecause______.Themaintroublewithyoungdriversisthat______.
A、Hemajorsinengineering.B、Hewasn’tatthelectureatthattime.C、Hehasonlyrecentlybecomeinterestedinphilosophy.D、H
Allhisfriendscongratulatedhim______(听说他获得了演讲比赛一等奖).
ArecentcaseinAustraliashowshoweasilyfearcanfrustrateaninformant’sgoodintentions.InDecember,awomanwroteanonym
SinceAndrewBentongraduatedfromcollegelessthanfouryearsago,hehasdroppedoutofaPrincetonPh.D.programineconomic
SinceAndrewBentongraduatedfromcollegelessthanfouryearsago,hehasdroppedoutofaPrincetonPh.D.programineconomic
随机试题
生产关系范畴反映的是人与人之间的()
早产儿病房的平均室温应保持在
适度扩大基托面积,可以达到以下目的,除了
某房地产租赁有限公司与某企业达成一笔租赁交易,租赁设备的价格为400万元,租期为5年,利率为6%,按每年年末、每年年初支付方式计算的租金分别为()万元。
2016年9月末,甲公司董事会通过一项决议,拟将持有的一项闲置管理用设备对外出售。该设备为甲公司于2014年7月购入,原价为6000万元,预计使用10年,预计净残值为零,采用年限平均法计提折旧,至董事会决议出售时已计提折旧1350万元,未计提减值准备。甲公
三个运动员跨台阶,台阶总数在100~150级之间,第一位运动员每次跨3级台阶,最后一步还剩2级台阶。第二位运动员每次跨4级台阶,最后一步还剩3级台阶。第三位运动员每次跨5级台阶,最后一步还剩4级台阶。这些台阶总共有()级。
谈一件别人误解你的事情。并谈谈你是怎样处理的?
下列选项中,属于特别刑法的是()
在FTP用户接口命令中,“ASCII”命令用于()。
以下关于广义表的叙述中,哪一条是正确的?
最新回复
(
0
)