Phineas Gage's Missing Brain Mapped

Image of the rod passing through Phineas Gage's skull and brain.
Precise placement of rod that passed through Phineas Gage's skull and brain.
(Image credit: Van Horn, et.al, 2012, PLoS ONE)

In 1848 Phineas Gage took a rod through his skull and survived to become one of neuroscience's most famous case studies. His brain recently got a second look by scientists, who were able to analyze how the rod that found its way into his skull would have done such irreparable damage to his personality, but still let him live.

The researchers used brain imaging data that was lost to science for a decade to look at the damage to Gage's white matter "pathways" that connect brain regions, building on earlier research studying the brain's "connectome."

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