http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/14.09/brainshock.html

Edwin Cooper has been sent, or has sent himself, to about 60 severely 
brain-injured people since the mid-1980s, when he first made the accidental 
discovery that electrical stimulation had
effects on arousal. He was using a neuro-stimulator to relieve spasticity in 
the limbs of microcephalics, people with abnormally small skulls who often have 
reduced mental capacity and
poor muscle control. During the treatment, he recalls, one patient started 
looking around his room and smiling when people walked in, instead of staring 
blankly. Cooper had already
observed that when he placed the stimulator on one arm of a quadriplegic 
patient to strengthen the muscles there, the opposite arm also got stronger. He 
concluded that the electricity was
making its way to the brain, crossing to the opposite hemisphere, and 
stimulating arousal centers in the process. He began to wonder about the effect 
this might have on unconscious
people. "I thought, if someone were normal and able-bodied but in a coma, maybe 
this would make a difference, maybe help wake them up," Cooper says. "It was 
like maybe we could reboot the
brain."

Marshall



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