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Where the toast burn
Where the toast burn







where the toast burn

In the operating room, Dr Penfield’s exploring probe elicited that remark, leading him to the area of the brain responsible for the seizures. At one point he said, “Now I hear music.” The “I smell burning toast” exclamation is attributed to another patient who was forewarned of oncoming epileptic seizures by this olfactory experience.

WHERE THE TOAST BURN MOVIE

You could hear a pin drop in the room as the patient in the movie responded to Dr Penfield’s questions. The meeting room was packed everyone was excited and astounded to be listening to Dr Penfield and watching his brief movie, which showed a fully conscious patient with his brain exposed, and Dr Penfield using a pencil-like electric probe to gently touch various areas of the brain. I recalled one of the pre-med society’s monthly meetings, which featured Dr Wilder Penfield, the neurosurgeon who mapped the brain for the treatment of epilepsy using what was called the Montreal procedure. Immediately my mind went back to 1950, when I was a third-year pre-med student at McGill University.

where the toast burn

He would have been 127 years old this year (1891–1976). A bit annoyed for not being able to understand the logo’s message, I was about to continue with my intended search, when it suddenly dawned on me-the toast! The smell of burning toast! The man in the cartoon must be Wilder Penfield! Canada’s most famous neurosurgeon of the mid-1950s! Indeed, Google was celebrating Dr Wilder Penfield’s birthday on 26 January. There was a burning piece of toast, something that looked like a piece of a face, something that looked like a brain, and then a drawing of a man’s face. To my irritation the Google logo was a cartoonish puzzle that I did not understand. I turned on my computer this morning and clicked on the Google webpage to do a search on aphasia, and, in particular, on Pierre Paul Broca, the celebrated neuroanatomist of the 1850s.









Where the toast burn