The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, Sacks
Book written by a neurologist about his patients.
This was a good read read, there were some really interesting patients. Here is the list from the corresponding Wikipedia article:
- The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, about Dr. P, who has visual agnosia; however, before that diagnosis is reached, Dr. P consults an ophthalmologist when he develops diabetes, thinking that it might affect his vision. The ophthalmologist tells him that he does not have diabetes and instead refers him to Dr. Sacks (the author), to whom Dr. P describes his symptoms of visual agnosia.
- The Lost Mariner, about Jimmie G., who has anterograde amnesia (the loss of the ability to form new memories) due to Korsakoff syndrome acquired after a rather heavy episode of alcoholism in 1970. He can remember nothing of his life since the end of World War II, including events that happened only a few minutes ago. Occasionally, he can recall a few fragments of his life between 1945 and 1970, such as when he sees “satellite” in a headline and subsequently remarks about a satellite tracking job he had that could only have occurred in the 1960s. He believes it is still 1945 (the segment covers his life in the 1970s and early 1980s), and seems to behave as a normal, intelligent young man aside from his inability to remember most of his past and the events of his day-to-day life. He struggles to find meaning, satisfaction, and happiness in the midst of constantly forgetting what he is doing from one moment to the next.
- The President’s Speech, about a ward of aphasiacs and agnosiacs listening to a speech given by an unnamed actor-president, “the old charmer”, presumably Ronald Reagan. Many in the first group laughed at the speech, despite their inability to follow the words, and Sacks claims their laughter to be at the president’s facial expressions and tone, which they find “not genuine”. One woman in the latter group criticizes the structure of the president’s sentences, stating that he “does not speak good prose”.
- The Disembodied Lady, a unique case of a woman losing her entire sense of proprioception (the sense of the position of parts of the body, relative to other neighbouring parts of the body) due to vitamin B6 toxicity.
- The Man Who Fell out of Bed, about a young man whom Dr. Sacks sees as a medical student. Sacks encounters the patient on the floor of his hospital room, where he tells Sacks that he woke up to find an alien leg in his bed. Assuming that one of the nurses had played a prank on him, he attempted to toss the leg out of bed, only to find that he was attached to it. Although Sacks attempts to persuade the patient that the leg is his own, he remains bewildered in an apparent case of somatoparaphrenia.
- On the Level, another case involving damaged proprioception. Dr. Sacks interviews a patient who has trouble walking upright and discovers that he has lost his innate sense of balance due to Parkinson’s-like symptoms that have damaged his inner ears; the patient, comparing his sense of balance to a carpenter’s spirit level, suggested constructing a similar level inside a pair of glasses. This enables him to judge his balance by sight and after a few weeks, the task of keeping his eye on the level became less tiring.
- The Twins, about autistic savants. Dr. Sacks meets twin brothers who can neither read nor perform multiplication, yet are playing a “game” of finding very large prime numbers. While the twins were able to spontaneously generate these numbers, from six to twenty digits, Sacks had to resort to a book of prime numbers to join in with them. This was used in the 1993 film House of Cards starring Tommy Lee Jones. The twins also instantly count 111 dropped matches, simultaneously remarking that 111 is three 37s, an ability demonstrated by Dustin Hoffman’s autistic character in the 1988 film Rain Man. This story has been questioned by Makoto Yamaguchi, who doubts that a book of large prime numbers could exist as described, and points out that reliable scientific reports only support approximate perception when rapidly counting large numbers of items. Autistic savant Daniel Tammet points out that the twins provided the matchbox and may have counted its contents beforehand, noting that he finds the value of 111 to be “particularly beautiful and matchstick-like”.
- Eyes Right, about a woman in her sixties who has hemispatial neglect. She completely forgets the idea of “left” relative to her own body and the world around her. When nurses place food or drink on her left side, she fails to recognize that they are there. Dr. Sacks attempts to show the patient the left side of her body using a video screen setup; when the patient sees the left side of her body, on her right, she is overwhelmed with anxiety and asks for it to stop.
- The Dog Beneath the Skin, concerning a 22-year-old medical student, “Stephen D.”, who, after a night under the influence of amphetamines, cocaine, and PCP, wakes to find he has a tremendously heightened sense of smell. Sacks would reveal many years later that he, in fact, was Stephen D.
- The Autist Artist, about a 21-year-old named Jose who had been deemed “hopelessly retarded” and had seizures; however, when given Sacks’ pocket watch and asked to draw it, he composed himself and drew the watch in surprising detail.
A lot of did go over my head. It’s when words with fancy endings like “nosia” and “pathy” start rolling in that I get confused.