The Pulse of Thought: Hemodynamics of the Brain and Mind
The best proof of the immediate afflux of blood to the brain during mental activity is due to Mosso's observations…. By means of apparatus described in his book, this physiologist was enabled to let the brain-pulse record itself directly by a tracing. The intracranial blood-pressure rose immediately whenever the subject was spoken to, or when he began to think actively, as in solving a problem in mental arithmetic. Mosso gives in his work a large number of reproductions of tracings which show the instantaneity of the change of blood-supply, whenever the mental activity was quickened by any cause whatever, intellectual or emotional. (2, vol I, pp. 97–99)
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