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Consciousness and the Highest Cerebral Centres, with Remarks on the Penfield-Walshe Controversy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 February 2018
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In deep coma the patient usually lies still, without moving. Why doesn't he move? Many will answer, “Because he is unconscious”. This is on the assumption, which seems eminently reasonable, that motor centres are under the control of a higher centre for mind. On voluntary movement, according to this assumption, motor centres receive and obey impulses from the psychic centre. When the psychic centre is paralysed, as in coma, the motor centres lie idle, like men in a factory marking time because the foreman is away and there is no one to tell them what to do.
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- Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1960
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