Yes, some people are born with not all of their brain, or they have it and not all of it works.
People can also be injured or have a medical problem that causes their brain not to all work.
But you can still function with half your brain, you may have to learn your whole life over, there are different cases, but yes, it is possible.
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∙ 14y agoBrain cells
15 use brain Divide by 2 Duuhhh
You cannot. You have only one brain so you can use at most 1 of your brain!
Humans can use 100% of their brain. The popular myth that humans only use 10% of their brain is not true. Different regions of the brain are active at different times and perform various functions, but all parts of the brain are utilized to some degree.
1,use your brain
Yes, dolphins are known to exhibit unihemispheric slow-wave sleep, where one hemisphere of the brain remains active while the other rests. This ability allows dolphins to sleep and remain aware of their surroundings, essentially functioning with half of their brain at a time.
Yes, if one half of your brain is not working properly or for any other reason you may have, you can under go surgery to detatch the halfs of your brain!
It is possible to live with only half of your brain in rare cases, a condition known as hemispherectomy. However, this is a complex and risky procedure typically done as a last resort for severe medical conditions such as uncontrolled seizures. The brain has remarkable plasticity, which means the remaining half can sometimes compensate for missing functions.
Yes.
a earthworm and a brain
uhm. Why? Are you looking for half a brain?
Well the entire brain gets tired but the have to keep swimming so only half of its brain and one of its eye goes to sleep and reverse to keep it from floating to the top of the ocean
your brain shuts off but not completely. or you will be dead. only half of your brain stays on. and the other half shuts off.
Playing with Fire - 2013 I Only Use Half of My Brain Half of the Time 1-3 was released on: USA: April 2013
Someone who only has half a brain
There isn't a specific part of the brain responsible for praying. Prayer is a spiritual or religious practice that involves a combination of cognitive, emotional, and cultural factors, rather than being localized to a specific brain region. It likely involves a network of brain regions associated with cognitive processing, emotion regulation, and belief systems.
the right half of the brain