Disproven Facts
Biology

The adult brain is hardwired and cannot generate new neurons.

Now we know:

Neurogenesis (new neuron growth) occurs in the adult hippocampus and possibly other regions. The brain is plastic throughout life.

Disproven 1998

What changed?

For most of the twentieth century, a single sentence organized thinking about the adult brain: the neurons you were born with were the neurons you would die with. New cells might grow in the liver, the skin, the gut, but the central nervous system, once its development was complete, was fixed. Injury was permanent. The brain that entered adulthood was the brain that would age in place, its circuits laid down and unchangeable. Santiago Ramón y Cajal, the Spanish histologist whose meticulous drawings of neural anatomy earned him a Nobel Prize in 1906, put it most bluntly: "In the adult centers the nerve paths are something fixed, ended, immutable. Everything may die, nothing may be regenerated."

Ramón y Cajal's authority was enormous, and his conclusion was not unreasonable given the technology of his era. The neuron doctrine, the principle that the nervous system is composed of discrete cells, was itself a major advance. Detecting whether individual neurons were being born in living adult tissue required tools that did not exist in 1906 and barely existed in 1960. The dogma that the adult brain could not generate new neurons thus rested not on disproof but on an absence of evidence, bolstered by the authority of a founding figure and the theoretical coherence of the resulting picture.

The first serious cracks came in the 1960s, when Joseph Altman, a researcher at MIT, injected radioactively labeled thymidine, a DNA precursor that incorporates into newly divided cells, into adult rats and found evidence of new neuron formation in the hippocampus, olfactory bulb, and cerebral cortex. His findings, published in Science in 1962 and 1965, were largely dismissed or ignored. The consensus was too settled to be overturned by results that most neurologists assumed must reflect a methodological error.

The rehabilitation of Altman's insight came in stages. Michael Kaplan extended the thymidine labeling work in the 1970s and 1980s, using electron microscopy to demonstrate that the newly divided cells in the adult rat hippocampus had the structural characteristics of neurons. Fernando Nottebohm, working at Rockefeller University, showed in 1983 that the brains of canaries grew new neurons each spring as the birds learned new songs, the first unambiguous demonstration in vertebrates that adult neurogenesis was tied to learning and memory. By the mid-1990s the evidence from rodents, birds, and nonhuman primates had accumulated to the point where the dogma was untenable.

The definitive demonstration in humans came in 1998. Peter Eriksson, working at the Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Göteborg, Sweden, together with Fred Gage of the Salk Institute, used an ingenious opportunity: cancer patients who had received infusions of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), a DNA synthesis marker used clinically to track tumor growth, had donated their brains to science after death. BrdU incorporates permanently into the DNA of any dividing cell. In postmortem tissue from the hippocampal dentate gyrus, Eriksson and colleagues found BrdU-labeled cells that also expressed neuronal markers, cells that had divided during adulthood and differentiated into neurons. Their paper, published in Nature Medicine in November 1998, concluded: "The human hippocampus retains its ability to generate neurons throughout life." The sentence demolished a century of received wisdom in twelve words.

Fluorescence microscopy image showing doublecortin-positive cells (highlighted in green or red) in hippocampal tissue, indicating the presence of newly born neurons in the adult brain.
Microscopy image of doublecortin-positive (DCX) neuronal precursor cells in the subgranular zone of the hippocampal dentate gyrus. DCX is a marker for newly generated neurons, providing direct visual evidence of adult neurogenesis - the process that contradicted a century of neuroscience dogma. · Plümpe T et al. - CC BY 2.0

At a glance

Disproven
1998
Believed since
1930
Duration
68 years
Taught in schools
1945 – 1998

Sources

  1. [1] Neurogenesis in the adult human hippocampus - Eriksson, Peter S. et al., 1998
  2. [2] Autoradiographic and histological evidence of postnatal hippocampal neurogenesis in rats - Altman, Joseph and Das, Gopal D., 1965
  3. [3] A new component in avian song control nuclei is not replaced in adult canaries - Nottebohm, Fernando, 1983

See also

Psychology
You were taught:

Humans only use 10% of their brain.

Now we know:

Virtually all brain regions have identified functions and show activity throughout the day. The 10% figure has no basis in neuroscience.

Disproven1990
Read more →
Biology
You were taught:

Humans have five senses: sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell.

Now we know:

Humans have far more than five senses. Scientific consensus recognizes at least 20, including proprioception (body position), equilibrioception (balance), nociception (pain), thermoception (temperature), and interoception (internal body states).

Disproven2010
Read more →
Biology
You were taught:

Cloning an animal would produce an exact physical and behavioral duplicate of the original.

Now we know:

Cloning produces a genetic copy but not an identical individual. Epigenetics, developmental variation, and environment mean cloned animals differ from their genetic source in appearance, behavior, and health. Dolly the sheep (born July 1996, announced February 1997) was the first cloned mammal from an adult cell.

Disproven1997
Read more →
Psychology
You were taught:

Women are biologically more emotional and less rational than men, and less capable of mathematics or professional careers.

Now we know:

No reliable biological evidence supports innate female inferiority in rationality or mathematical ability. Performance gaps largely disappear when controlling for socialization and stereotype threat, and have narrowed dramatically wherever structural barriers have been removed.

Disproven2008
Read more →