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I have heard stories/reports that if a certain part of the brain (taking care of certain functions) is damaged other parts take over the function of the damaged part.

Intuitively this could mean 2 things:

  • We are not using the brain to its full capability.

  • The performance of the brain will take a hit due to other brain centers taking over the functionality of the damaged center.

For me the first one does not make sense since evolutionary selection makes sure we are endowed with the most efficient systems. So what is happening exactly when brain centers get damaged?

AliceD
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DuttaA
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  • When they get damaged, they get damaged. You probably want to as "what is happening exactly" in recovery, otherwise I don't see the point of your other premises. Anyway, it seems you're asking a bit too many questions in one. – the gods from engineering Aug 07 '18 at 16:34
  • Are you simply asking if performance takes a hit after brain damage? That's blindingly obvious to anyone who's seen a stroke patient. – the gods from engineering Aug 07 '18 at 16:41
  • @Fizz why not click on the link and not take the question title literally...I just asked one question – DuttaA Aug 07 '18 at 16:59
  • I did look at the article. It didn't help me understand what your question/confusion actually is. – the gods from engineering Aug 07 '18 at 17:00
  • @Fizz I don't understand the confusion..Simple terms how is brain performing the same functions after some part of it is dead – DuttaA Aug 07 '18 at 17:05
  • It doesn't do that immediately, it takes (a usually lengthy) rehabilitation for that to happen. And rehabilitation is not always successful. So I don't see what's the big contradiction you see. What "does not make sense"? – the gods from engineering Aug 07 '18 at 17:13
  • If your only problem is with "we are not using the brain to full capacity", then your intuition is correct. I can't immediately find where that was asked here before, but https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/do-we-really-use-only-10/ Ok I found it here as well https://psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/12281/interpretation-actual-result-of-10-of-your-brain-myth – the gods from engineering Aug 07 '18 at 17:43
  • @Fizz thanks I'll check the links out kind of busy – DuttaA Aug 09 '18 at 10:59
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    A related, but opposite phenomenon, is when an unused part of the brain is taken over by a different part of the brain. For example, in deaf individuals, the auditory cortex responds to visual stimuli. – StrongBad Aug 09 '18 at 18:30

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To the question "what is happening exactly when brain centres get damaged?". The answer is: When any tissue, including neural tissue, in the body gets damaged, the body will try to repair them. The process of reparation involves many distinct processes, such as the process to get rid of the damaged tissue and the process to regenerate new tissue. But compared with other tissues, such as skin, mucosa, and connective tissue in general, neural tissue has a much more limited capability to regenerate, yet it is not zero. Also, in the nervous system, neural plasticity, which is the adaptation of other neural tissue to perform the function that is impaired or lost, plays the role in the process of reparation too. The following articles may help explain this matter in more details: ref1 and ref 2, and ref3. And some animal studies of neural plasticity: ref4 and ref5.

user287279
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  • It seems that the link to ref1 “ From Hydra Regeneration to Human Brain Structural Plasticity: A Long Trip through Narrowing Roads” does not work. The url - file:///D:/x%20Others/936817.pdf - has to be copied and paste directly into the url search box. – user287279 Aug 09 '18 at 09:52
  • @user287279: that's because you pasted a link to a file your local drive "D:" – the gods from engineering Aug 09 '18 at 11:00
  • @Fizz: Thanks a lot, that's why. Sorry for the mishap. Well, if anyone is interested in reading "From Hydra Regeneration to Human Brain Structural Plasticity: A Long Trip through Narrowing Roads”, please go to https://www.hindawi.com/journals/tswj/2011/936817/abs/ and click for the pdf file from the menu at the right upper quadrant of the page. – user287279 Aug 09 '18 at 12:13