Michael Gazzaniga (b. 1939) is widely regarded as the father of cognitive neuroscience — a field he named and helped create. His research on split-brain patients (whose corpus callosum connecting the two hemispheres has been surgically severed to treat epilepsy) has provided some of the most dramatic demonstrations of hemispheric specialization and revealed fundamental insights about consciousness, language, and the construction of coherent experience.
Split-Brain Research
Beginning as a graduate student with Roger Sperry (who won the Nobel Prize for this work), Gazzaniga studied patients who had undergone callosotomy. By presenting information to only one hemisphere (using lateralized visual presentations), he showed that the left hemisphere specializes in language, speech, and analytical reasoning, while the right hemisphere excels in spatial processing, face recognition, and global pattern perception. The hemispheres of split-brain patients can hold different information, different beliefs, and even different emotional responses simultaneously.
Gazzaniga's most profound finding is the "left-brain interpreter" — a mechanism in the left hemisphere that constructs explanations for behavior and experience, even when it does not have access to the real causes. When the right hemisphere (which cannot speak) initiates an action based on information only it has seen, the left hemisphere (which controls speech) confabulates a plausible explanation rather than admitting ignorance. This interpreter mechanism may explain why humans constantly generate narratives to explain their own behavior, beliefs, and feelings — even when those explanations are post hoc rationalizations rather than accurate reports of causation.