Cerebral disconnection syndrome
From Psy3241
In a brain composed of localized but connected specialized areas, disconnection leads to dysfunction. This
simple formulation underlay a range of 19th century neurological disorders, referred to collectively as disconnection
syndromes. Although disconnectionism fell out of favour with the move against localized brain
theories in the early 20th century, in 1965, an American neurologist brought disconnection to the fore once
more in a paper entitled, ‘Disconnexion syndromes in animals and man’. In what was to become the manifesto
of behavioural neurology, Norman Geschwind outlined a pure disconnectionist framework which revolutionized
both clinical neurology and the neurosciences in general. Geschwind’s general disconnectionist paradigm ruled clinical neurology for
20 years but in the late 1980s, with the re-emergence of specialized functional roles for association cortex, the
orbit of its remit began to diminish and it became incorporated into more general models of higher dysfunction.
By the 1990s, textbooks of neurology were devoting only a few pages to classical disconnection theory. Today,
new techniques to study connections in the living human brain allow us, for the first time, to test the classical
formulation directly and broaden it beyond disconnections to include disorders of hyperconnectivity.