"I screamed, but there was nothing to hear." NPR reports on the disturbing story of a man whom doctors thought was in a coma for 23 years. In reality, he was totally conscious, but couldn't communicate. Improved brain imaging technology--which made his real state apparent--was "like a second birth."
Man's Medical History Reads Like a Horror Novel
Leave a comment
More items
Dr Peter Watts, Canadian science fiction writer, beaten and arrested at US border
My friend, the wonderful sf writer Peter Watts was beaten without provocation and arrested by US border guards on Tuesday. I heard about it early Wednesday morning in London and called Cindy Cohn, the legal director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. She worked her contacts to get in touch with... More.
Tiger Woods UK media gag order leaked
Wikileaks has published a copy of the UK media gag order that makes it a crime to publish real or Photoshopped images of "Eldrick Tont (Tiger) Woods... naked, or any naked parts of Claimant's body or of him involved in any sexual activity." So all you would-be UK slash-artists dreaming of hot Tiger-... More.
Video from Mad Max campout weekend
Last month, I blogged about a group of Mad Max superfan cosplayers who hied themselves out to the desert in a variety of amazing vehicles (including a flying one-person chopper!) and costumes and spent the weekend playing at apocalypse. The event's organizer, DJ Wolfie, has put together a (mildly... More.
Wolfram|Alpha app for iPhone marked down from $50 to $20
The amazing Wolfram|Alpha app for iPhone is on sale for $20 (normally $50) for the rest of the year. With its simple interface the Wolfram|Alpha App lets you instantly compute answers to questions across thousands of domains—from finance and food, to math and medicine, to stocks and spacecraft,... More.
Anti-DRM Free Software Foundation membership drive
Holmes Wilson from the Free Software Foundation writes, "We're at a crucial moment in the fight against DRM. This year--thanks to the strength of the movement you've built and been a part of--we defeated DRM on music. But DRM on books, games, and other digital media is a bigger threat than ever. ... More.

This sounds like locked-in syndrome (which--don't kill me--was featured on a episode of House last season)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locked-in_syndrome
Scary shit.
It sounds more like a horror short story. "I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream"
OMG, I remember that story. Horrifying!!
I'm almost surprised he hasn't become a raving lunatic.
"Awakenings" by Oliver Sacks.
How did this not turn up when he had an EEG? That alone should have told his doctors that he wasn't in a vegetative state.
As much as I dislike Harlan Ellison the person, that story is amazing. "I have no mouth and I must scream"
this is like that metallica song "one". that song always terrified me with it's descriptions of being trapped inside your head without being able to communicate. It was my worst nightmare for years.
Nightmare city. Eesh.
@ #8,
Metallica actually based that on the book "Johnny Got His Gun". Fairly good read.
good lord. my sympathies are with you.
oddly enough, randi.org is down.
Oh, hum. This sounds fishy. The medical staff is using a dubious kind of "facilitated communication" by which someone is actually moving the hand of the coma guy around on a pad. P.Z. Myers, among other skeptics, linked to a vid showing no discernible involvement in this "communication" on the part of the man supposedly conscious. See his blog post:
http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2009/11/really_this_guy_is_conscious.php
He also had this to say in a commentary:
Alas, the article in Nature criticizing this is behind a paywall:
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v443/n7108/full/443132b.html
Oh, and here's James Randi's analysis of the case, and it's pretty damning:
http://www.randi.org/site/index.php/swift-blog/783-this-cruel-farce-has-to-stop.html
Bottom line: the Facilitated Communication used here was already discredited years ago, and several medical associations specialized in the treatment of brain illnesses and injuries say it does nothing except give false hope to families.
Whether it's an innocent Ouija board effect or a straight-up scam, who can say, but this is DEFINITELY facilitated communication These people are widely used with non-communicative autistic people, and studies have shown that when you whisper a question, show him a picture, or otherwise communicate to him in a way that the facilitator DOES NOT SEE OR HEAR, the communication magicly stops. Until he can communicate without someone watching the screen and punching buttons for him, I won't believe it.
This story gets weirder and weirder. To summarize:
1. Yes, this guy really does appear to be conscious and able to perceive the world around him.
2. The people who claim to be helping him "communicate" are almost certainly frauds or self-deluded.
Wired just wrote a follow-up on the story.
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/11/houben-communication/
Having watched the AP video of the story, it is blatantly obvious that the "facilitator" is typing out what's in her own mind, and Mr. Houben himself is not communicating on that touch screen. She is grabbing his index finger and typing words on the touch screen at a fairly rapid rate like that of a fully able person like herself, despite the fact that he can barely see the screen and can barely move his hand.
That faked part of the story was unnecessary. The main point is that he came out of his 23-year coma and is clearly conscious now, despite the diagnosis that that was not going to happen. He's conscious but he sure ain't typing messages as claimed.