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Salt
Lake City - NASA scientists are studying autistic
savant Kim Peek, hoping that technology used to
study the effects of space travel on the brain
will help explain his mental capabilities.
Last week, researchers had Peek - who was the
basis for Dustin Hoffman's character in the 1988
film "Rain Man" - undergo a series of
tests including computerized tomography and magnetic
resonance imaging, the results of which will be
melded to create a three dimensional look at his
brain structure.
The researchers want to compare a series of MRI
images taken in 1988
by Dr. Dan Christensen, Peek's neuropsychiatrist
at the University of
Utah, to see what has since changed within his
brain.
Not only are Peek's brain and his abilities unique,
noted Richard D.
Boyle, director of the California center performing
the scans, but that he
seems to be getting smarter in his specialty areas
as he ages is
unexpected.
The 53-year-old Peek is called a "mega-savant"
because he is a genius in about 15 different subjects,
from history and literature and geography to numbers,
sports, music and dates. But he also is severely
limited in other ways, like not being able to
find the silverware drawer at home or dressing
himself.
"The goal is to measure what happens in Kim's
brain when he
expresses things and when he thinks about them,"
said his father, Fran.
He came to the attention of NASA researchers at
the Center for
Bioinformatics Space Life Sciences at the NASA-AMES
Research Center when
he spoke in late October at a Rotary Club in central
California.
When Kim Peek was born, doctors found a water
blister on the right
side of his skull, similar to hydrocephalus. Later
tests showed his brain
hemispheres are not separated, forming a single,
large "data storage"
area.
It is likely that is why Peek has been able to
memorize more than 9,000 books, his father said.
But he has lagged in other areas; his motor skills
developed more slowly than those of his peers.
Fran Peek doesn't need the test results to know
much has changed for his son in the last 16 years.
He was a shy young man with few social skills
when the movie propelled him to public notice.
But now, after speaking to more than two million
people over the years, his father says he become
calmer and is more at ease speaking in front of
people.
He also no longer reads only nonfiction, Fran
Peek said, but has dabbled with some fiction,
such as books by Stephen King, because that is
what so many people talk about.
When he's home in Utah, Peek spends afternoons
at the Salt Lake City
Public Library poring over books, even memorizing
phone books and the
Cole's address directory.
Kim Peek was the model author Barrow Morrow used
for the original "Rain Man" script and
screenplay, but the final product retained only
a small part of the original story.
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