Carole Brooks Platt, Ph.D.


Carole regularly attends the Science of Consciousness Conference in Tucson, AZ, except 2020, the year of the coronavirus. She has presented her research there, as well as at poetry events and other academic settings.


Her work was originally informed by Julian Jaynes's theory on the hallucinatory origins of poetry and prophecy in the right hemisphere of the brain.


She was an invited speaker at the Julian Jaynes Conference in Charleston, WV, in 2013, and, more recently, at a symposium on "Further Reaches of the Imagination II" at the Esalen Center for Research and Theory in Big Sur, CA, Nov 1-6, 2015. She was also invited to speak at the Poetry by the Sea global conference in Madison, CT, May 2016, but, unfortunately, was unable to attend.

On February 23, 2017, she presented her research at the Jung Center of Houston.


Her book, In Their Right Minds: The Lives and Shared Practices of Poetic Geniuses, brings together all of her literary and neuroscientific research and was an Amazon Hot New Release in Neuropsychology and Poetry / Literary Criticism.


Carole also provides research on hemispheric differences, atypical lateralization, and handedness at:

https://www.facebook.com/RightMindMatters/.


Carole is currently working on a book on female mystics and mediums, beginning with Joan of Arc, and female poets who felt aligned with Joan. Carole's popular stand alone article on Joan of Arc is available for purchase from her publisher:


https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/imp/jcs/2019/00000026/f0020011/art00008

Born That Way

In my last blog, What's Right for You May not be Right for Others, I introduced Iain McGilchrist's notion of the 5% of the worldwide population who have atypical lateralization for language. Whereas his book, The Master and His Emissary, is so inclusive in describing left/right hemispheric differences within the brain and in successive generational proclivities, from my point of view, he left out the best bit about the highly creative minority of right-hemisphere or mixed-dominant individuals. 

In this post, I'm going to discuss handedness and atypical lateralization for language, a predisposing factor for psychosis. The information is based on the newest research articles found in the medical textbook, Language Lateralization and Psychosis (2009), edited by Iris E. C. Sommer and René S. Kahn. The other names that appear below are contributing chapter authors or researchers they cite in this text. 



First of all, left-right asymmetry, whether in the brain (cerebral) or in the body (visceral), happens during the baby's development in the womb. The leftward asymmetry (greater than right size) that produces left-hemispheric dominance for language occurs between weeks 29  and 31 of gestation. The bodily effects are evident later on. Your feet, for instance, are probably different in size, the right is the larger foot in males, and the left in females. My left hand is much longer than my right. Typical left-hemispheric cerebral dominance is not just found in humans: it is in animals too, stretching back phylogenetically several hundred million years. 

Children of two left-handed parents have a 50% chance of becoming left-handed, while for children of right-handed parents it's less than 10%. The language lateralization of the parents also determines to a large extent that of their children. I may be an anomaly with two right-handed parents and the only left-handed child amongst six siblings; but I'd say two of my sisters are right- or mixed-dominant despite their handedness. In furtherance of this scenario, I recently had dinner with a good friend and her teenage son. Both were right-handed. But, when I asked them to fold their arms across their chests, they both put the left hand up, showing some mixed-dominance. My friend is an actress and a singer and her son's father is left-handed; so, this makes sense for both mother and son. In fact, enhanced right-brain dominant folk seem to find each other as a quick tally of my friends attests. 

Great apes are typically right-handed and the parts of the brain used in human language, Broca's and Wernicke's areas, are associated with tool use in chimpanzees. So, grasping with the hand was probably the precursor for "grasping" an idea using language. Even birds use their feet preferentially: the right foot exerts strong force and the left uses fine manipulations. There is evidence that in preindustrial societies right-handedness only became apparent to researchers when analyzing the inhabitants' fine manipulations. Handedness specialist I. C. McManus says that “8% -10% of the population has been left-handed for at least the past 200,000 years or so.” This percentage has remained constant. Again, there are gender differences: men are 25% more likely to be left-handed than women. Compared to the 5% to 6% of right-handers who show RH language dominance, 30% to 35% of left-handers do.

Visuospatial functions are normally assigned to the right hemisphere. Birds too show right-eye (LH) superiority for discriminating visual patterns, left-eye (RH) for spatial tasks. It's well known that men have better visuospatial ability than women and this is because men are generally more left-brain dominant for language than women, whose language functions are more spread out, leaving less room for the visuospatial. But all combinations of language vs. visuospatial functions can occur: L/L, L/R, R/R. In women who are R/R like me,  their language function can practically eclipse their visuospatial ability. I have no map reading ability and am generally lost in environmental space. Forget the old adage that left-handers die sooner than righties. New research shows that “the very oldest respondents have a higher rate of left-handedness than those who are somewhat younger,” according to McManus.




Whereas an intolerance for left-handedness arose with the industrial revolution, as fine work needed to be done and equipment and writing pens were designed for right-handers, a French study by Faurie and Raymond (2004) showed that the rate of left-handedness has not actually changed since the Upper Paleolithic. France has been antipathetic to left-handedness, historically tying the left hand behind the back to force right-handedness. There are no left-handers in China, as it is forbidden. My European friends might be interested in the fact that the highest rates of left-handedness are in Britain, the Netherlands, and Belgium, I assume because of more tolerance. Yet, even if forced to write with the right hand, the bearer of the left-handed gene will carry it over to their own children while continuing to use the left for other non-writing functions.

                              
In this History of Left-handers, note that Eve is picking the apple 
    with her left (evil) hand

What about language lateralization and psychosis? 

Quoting Somers, Sommer and Kahn, "non-right-handed subjects, but not strong left-handers, had higher scores on schizotypy questionnaires than right-handed subjects. Mixed-handers showed a trend towards high schizotypy in comparison to left-handers." So, it's safer to be extremely left-handed than mixed, because the major language function is segregated to the right, not just increased language activity in the frontal and temporal areas of the right hemisphere that can account for hemispheric indecision and a predisposition to psychosis of the schizophrenic or bipolar variety. The authors state further that "bilateral language representation facilitates magical and delusional ideas by means of the more diffuse semantic activation to the right hemisphere compared to the left." Bilateral language representation is also associated with autism, dyslexia and ADHD.

In fMRI studies, right-handed thought-disordered patients showed activation in the right-hemisphere homolog of Wernicke’s area during speech production, while controls performing the same task showed left-lateralized activity, supporting Julian Jaynes's viewDiederen and Sommer studied 24 psychotic patients who actually experienced auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH) in the scanner. All were strongly right-handed and continued to experience AVH frequently despite using antipsychotic medication. The results showed increased activity in the right homolog of Broca's area, which the researchers connected to negative emotion and compared to inappropriate "release" language following damage or surgery to the left hemisphere. 

Overall, the studies indicate that decreased language activation on the left and increased activity on the right are associated with auditory hallucinations, while extreme left-handers are not prone to psychosis. Timothy Crow goes so far as to say that “schizophrenia is the price Homo sapiens pays for language (Crow, 1997a).” It's the lack of complete dominance, the failure to inhibit the non-dominant hemisphere that is problematic. Patients with the most severe hallucinations were the least leftward lateralized.

The final chapter by Clyde Francks lays the genetic blame on dad rather than mom. He claims that the same paternally inherited LRRTM1 gene associated with mixed/left-handedness, which suppresses the maternal gene, was also over-transmitted to schizophrenic patients in a large family study. Interestingly, he found the same father-child enhanced (roughly five times the mother's) genetic transmission in dyslexics.

These studies, of course,  do not paint the whole picture. The genetics are well described, but no mention is made of the traumatic incidents needed to trigger psychotic and/or dissociative episodes in those predisposed. The creative influence of increased right-hemispheric input is touched upon, especially as an argument for sustaining the genetic transfer of sometimes disabling mental illness, but not nearly enough. But then their lack is an opening for the kind of study I am doing on the genetics, early traumas and environmental influences on the minds of great poets, prophets and mediums whose voices have brought great art, guidance and shifting paradigms of consciousness to a general population less endowed for hearing them.  








7 comments:

Von said...

Any views on transantional adoptees who are brought in their early years from one culture and language to another and the effects that might produce?

Right Mind Matters said...

Thanks for your question, Von. Of course, adoptees would have the genetic makeup of their natural parents, and may have suffered from loss, abandonment and/or maltreatment. Those early traumas can be long lasting, but a new nurturing environment can only be a good thing. Studies do show that trauma can trigger a genetic predisposition to schizophrenia whether in the original or the adopted family. Take a look at the article, "The Medium and the Matrix," on my Web site, www.carolebrooksplatt.com, for more on this.

Brendan said...

Great post, Carole - No wonder the French word for "left" is sinister, and the English word "right," for which right-handedness gets it handle, means "correct" or "proper." I'm a lefty of two right-handed parents who eats and writes with the left hand but plays guitar and bats right-handed, which I figure are the result of going with the dominant culture. Very common experience, but I wonder what neurological processes are effect when one goes against their inherent left-handed grain to perform tasks right-handed. Is trauma the only trigger, or could more mundane transformation also cause or contribute to translateralization? Perhaps as much to allow me the thought disorders of my later life?

Side note, have you read Nancy Schepler-Hughes’ Saints, Scholars, and Schizophrenics: Mental Illness in Rural Ireland (1977)? Her contention that high rates of schizophrenia in men in rural wester Ireland was anthropological in nature, the result of the increased isolation and unwanted celibacy of bachelor farming, often the "runt" of the family for whom other choices like working abroad were forbidden. (Somebody had to inherit the impoverished fields of the failing farm.) Anyway, she mentions a folk belief in Western Ireland that oddly works into your theme here, that the soul is a fish located somewhere under the left arm and is wholly untrustworthy, devious, er sinister even ... For some reason I thought of those schizophrenics of Western Ireland as under the spell of those fish, whose wet voices whispered so loudly in their ear of comfort beneath the wave. The dark tide of the unconscious and all, the thrall of the siren's call: singing voices in the poet's ear, too, though mediated through some literate interface that prevents one from literally believing those voices. Anyway, great post and always looking forward to more. - Brendan

Brendan said...

P.S. Here's a Wikipedia nugget to ponder: One of the few items in common use that is actually advantageous for left-handers is the QWERTY keyboard. Over 3000 words in English can be typed with only the left hand on the QWERTY board as opposed to some 300 with the right hand, and overall, 56% of the keystrokes made when touch-typing on a QWERTY board are made with the left hand. - B

Right Mind Matters said...

Hi Brendan,

I had typed out a long response and then lost it all when I went to get this link for you:
http://www.madinamerica.com/author/mcornwall/

The gist was: left-handed writing/eating but right-handed-guitar playing, batting is pretty common. It is a type of bilateral brain organization. I'm extremely left-lateralized in my own actions: hand, foot, seeing through the left. My right eye never worked very well. The gist of the book I read was that mixed language dominance is a predisposing factor to psychosis, but not extreme right-cerebral lateralization for language. I don't think batting and playing the guitar right-handed would pose any threat to your psyche.

On the other hand, your early trauma could have triggered the compensatory response that empowers your endless waves of great poetry. I don't doubt that you are RH-dominant for language. And we're all the better for it!

Thanks for the Irish reference. I think in that case, as you suggested, it's the isolation and the celibacy that triggers the psychosis. Which leads me back to the link above.

I've been making new friends on Facebook who have passed through psychotic episodes and gone on to become writers and therapists helping others understand their voices. Really fascinating stuff.

Also, in the Medium and the Matrix on my Web site there is information about how early trauma can make a child's brain resemble the brain of a schizophrenic and the story of Lacanian therapist Annie Rogers who fits the model.

P.S. Typing on a computer is a great aid to working both hemispheres. I learned to use the mouse on the right and now I can't even do it with the left hand. It's the only thing I do with the right. Did you ever see My Dinner with André? There's a bit where the main character telling his story says you should periodically go around the house doing everything with your non-dominant hand to activate that hemisphere. I think it's sound advice.

Cheers and thanks for reading!!

P.P.S. I'm co-administering a FB page for left-handers, if you're interested.

Tom said...

Hi Carole,

I just stumbled on your site, and thought you might find the following book of interest!
The God of the Left Hemisphere: Blake, Bolte Taylor and the Myth of Creation by Roderick Tweedy

Here is an excerpt:
The left hemisphere is competitive… the will to power…is the agenda of the left hemisphere. It arose not to communicate with the world but to manipulate it. This inability to communicate or co-operate poses great difficulties for any project of reintegration or union. Its tendency would be to feed off the right hemisphere, to simply use and gain power over it too. Left hemisphere superiority is based, not on a leap forward by the left hemisphere, but on a ‘deliberate’ handicapping of the right. There is perhaps as much chance of persuading the head of a multinational to stop pursuing an agenda of self-interest and ruthless manipulation as there is of persuading the Urizenic program of the brain which controls him of “resubmitting” itself to the right hemisphere's values and awareness.
The story of the Western world being one of increasing left-hemispheric domination, we would not expect insight to be the key note. Instead we would expect a sort of insouciant optimism, the sleepwalker whistling a happy tune as he ambles towards the abyss.
The left, rational, brain, it might be safe to conclude, has no idea how serious the problem is, that is to say, how psychopathic it has become. Of course, it doesn't care that it doesn't care. “The idiot Reasoner laughs at the Man of Imagination/And from laughter proceeds to murder by undervaluing calumny”, noted Blake in a comment that is only remarkable for the fact that it has taken two hundred years to understand.
The apparently “conscious” rational self, the driving program and personality of the left brain, turns out to be deeply unconscious, a pathological sleepwalker blithely poisoning its own environment whilst tenaciously clinging onto the delusion of its own rightness. This unfortunate mixture, of arrogance and ignorance, defines contemporary psychology. The left hemisphere not only cannot see that there is a problem, it cannot see that it is itself the problem. This stance was often evident in my own discussions with friends and colleagues whilst researching this book, many of whom would ask why I was so “hard” on the left hemisphere. So extensive is its hold on the human brain that even when its role is pointed out, a deep resistance prevents many people from considering whether it is their own left brains who are actually asking that question.

Right Mind Matters said...

Thanks so much, Tom! I have read this book with its interesting mix of Blake's poetry and Jill Bolte Taylor's experience after her left-hemispheric stroke. I do think Tweedy goes a bit too far with with left/right dichotomy, but he sheds a lot of light on Blake's thought processes. Thanks again!