Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Hitchcock suspense movie helps detect awareness in patient in vegetative state

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 16 Sep, 2014 10:59 AM

    A group of Canadian neuroscientists say they have successfully used a suspenseful Alfred Hitchcock movie to record the conscious experiences of a patient who has been in a vegetative state for 16 years.

    The researchers at Western University in London, Ont., released a paper Monday about a brain scanning technique that monitors the response of non-responsive patients to a shortened version of the movie, "Bang! You're Dead."

    The study included a 34-year-old Canadian patient with a brain injury who has been unresponsive for 16 years.

    Postdoctoral fellows with Western's Brain and Mind Institute brought healthy and brain-damaged participants into an MRI scanner and then displayed the Hitchcock movie about a five-year-old boy who finds his uncle's revolver, partially loads it with bullets, and plays with it in public.

    Their study found the participants who watched the movie had common patterns of brain activity that strongly resembled those of healthy participants.

    The research found the similarities in reactions from the frontal lobes and the posterior parietal portions of the brain — areas where reasoning and more complex processes occur.

    Lead researcher Adrian Owen, a neuroscientist, said the findings suggest that one vegetative participant was both aware of and understood the movie. Another non-responsive participant didn't show the same level of response, he added.

    The technique determined the 34-year-old patient could understand language, follow events as they unfold in time, lay down memories, experience emotions and follow plot changes, Owen said in an interview.

    Owen is hopeful the research creates a method that will help detect whether a patient is conscious and whether they are able to think about what they're seeing and experiencing.

    Once doctors know a person can understand a film, he said, it may allow neuroscientists to make additional efforts to determine the wishes of a patient.

    "If you know a patient is aware, then you're going to behave differently," he said.

    "As soon as the patient themselves can be included in decision-making, we can have a really big impact on their quality of life. That may be a big thing like 'What do you want your future to be?' ... or a small thing like 'What kind of television do you like to watch?' "

    The neuroscientist said he hasn't decided how he'll adapt the movie technique to permit questions to be asked.

    The researchers chose the Hitchcock movie because it had a high level of suspense that would draw out a wide range of brain responses, they said.

    Owen said the decision to use a movie came partly because the father of the vegetative patient told him he'd taken his son to the movies for 16 years hoping he might be understanding something.

    The researcher said it's important to distinguish between vegetative patients and patients in a coma.

    A person in a vegetative state may be awake for periods of time but is often unresponsive and won't reply to attempts to communicate, he said, while a person in a coma isn't awake.

    The research paper — titled "A common neural code for similar conscious experiences in different individuals" — was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Lorina Naci and Rhodri Cusack of Western's department of psychology are listed as co-authors, along with Mimma Anello of the Schulich school of medicine and dentistry at Western.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    University Professor In Kamloops, B.C., Pleads Guilty To Assaulting Wife

    University Professor In Kamloops, B.C., Pleads Guilty To Assaulting Wife
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - A university professor who also serves as president of the Kamloops Child Development Society has pleaded guilty to assaulting his wife.

    University Professor In Kamloops, B.C., Pleads Guilty To Assaulting Wife

    Paws Get New Posting: Slain RCMP Officer's Police Dog To Return To Work Soon

    Paws Get New Posting: Slain RCMP Officer's Police Dog To Return To Work Soon
    INNISFAIL, Alta. - A police dog who tugged at heartstrings across the country when he rose on his hind legs at his slain partner's funeral to sniff his Stetson is going back to work.

    Paws Get New Posting: Slain RCMP Officer's Police Dog To Return To Work Soon

    Craft Distilleries In Vancouver Area Serve Up Cocktails, Offer Tours

    Craft Distilleries In Vancouver Area Serve Up Cocktails, Offer Tours
    VANCOUVER - There's a thriving craft distillery scene in and around Vancouver, which is being helped by recent changes to B.C. liquor regulations.

    Craft Distilleries In Vancouver Area Serve Up Cocktails, Offer Tours

    CP Rail halts demolition of Vancouver community gardens for talks with city

    CP Rail halts demolition of Vancouver community gardens for talks with city
    Canadian Pacific Railway has paused its bulldozers from demolishing community gardens in a Vancouver neighbourhood to meet with city officials about the land's use.

    CP Rail halts demolition of Vancouver community gardens for talks with city

    Premiers, native leaders call for forum on missing and murdered aboriginal women

    Premiers, native leaders call for forum on missing and murdered aboriginal women
    Canada's premiers and aboriginal leaders are calling on the federal government to participate in a roundtable to address the high number of native women who are missing and murdered.

    Premiers, native leaders call for forum on missing and murdered aboriginal women

    B.C. man says accomplices killed three women, teen killed herself

    B.C. man says accomplices killed three women, teen killed herself
    A young British Columbia man accused of killing three women and a 15-year-old girl says he was present when each of the victims died, but he told his trial that other people murdered the women and the girl killed herself.

    B.C. man says accomplices killed three women, teen killed herself