
Einstein’s brain had extraordinary folding patterns in several 
regions, which may help explain his genius, newly uncovered photographs 
suggest.
The photographs, published Nov. 16 in the journal Brain, reveal that 
the brilliant physicist had extra folding in his brain’s gray 
matter, the site of conscious thinking. In particular, the frontal 
lobes, regions tied to abstract thought and planning, had unusually 
elaborate folding, analysis suggests.
“It’s a really sophisticated part of the human brain,” said Dean 
Falk, study co-author and an anthropologist at Florida State University,
 referring to gray matter. “And [Einstein's] is extraordinary.”
Snapshots of a genius
Albert Einstein was the most famous physicist of the 20th century; 
his groundbreaking theory of general relativity explained how light 
curves due to the warping of space-time.
When the scientist died in 1955 at age 76, Thomas Harvey, the 
pathologist who autopsied him, took out Einstein’s brain and kept it. 
Harvey sliced hundreds of thin sections of brain tissue to place on 
microscope slides and also snapped 14 photos of the brain from several 
angles.
Harvey presented some of the slides, but kept the photos secret in order to write a book about the physicist’s brain.
The pathologist died before finishing his book, however, and the 
photos remained hidden for decades. But in 2010, after striking up a 
friendship with one of the new study’s co-authors, Harvey’s family 
donated the photos to the National Museum of Health and Medicine in 
Washington, D.C. Falk’s team began analyzing the photos in 2011.
More brainy connections
The team found that, overall, Eintsein’s brain had much more 
complicated folding across the cerebral cortex, which is the gray 
matter on the surface of the brain responsible for conscious thought. In
 general, thicker gray matter is tied to higher IQs.
Many scientists believe that more folds can create extra surface area
 for mental processing, allowing more connections between brain cells, 
Falk said. With more connections between distant parts of the brain, one
 would be able to make, in a sense, mental leaps, drawing upon these 
faraway brain cells to solve some cognitive problem.
The prefrontal cortex, which plays a key role in abstract thought, 
making predictions and planning, also had an unusually elaborate folding
 pattern in Einstein’s brain.
That may have helped the physicist develop the theory of relativity. 
“He did thought experiments where he’d imagine himself riding alongside a
 beam of light, and this is exactly the part of the brain one would 
expect to be very active” in such thought experiments, Falk told 
LiveScience.
In addition, Einstein’s occipital lobes, which perform visual processing, showed extra folds and creases.
The right and left parietal lobes also looked very asymmetrical, Falk
 said. It’s not clear how those features contributed to Einstein’s 
genius, but that brain region is key for spatial tasks and mathematical 
reasoning, Falk said.
The jury is still out on whether Einstein’s brain was extraordinary 
from birth or whether years of pondering physics made it special.
Falk believes both played a role.
“It was both nature and nurture,” she said. “He was born with a very 
good brain, and he had the kinds of experiences that allowed him to 
develop the potential he had.”
But most of Einstein’s raw ability probably came from a trick of 
nature rather than a lifetime of hard work, said Sandra Witelson, of the
 Michael G. De Groot School of Medicine at McMasters University who has 
done past studies of Einstein’s brain. In 1999, her work revealed that 
Einstein’s right parietal lobe had an extra fold, something that was 
either hardwired into his genes or happened while Einstein was still in 
the womb.
“It’s not just that it’s bigger or smaller, it’s that the actual 
pattern is different,” Witselson said. “His anatomy is unique compared 
to every other photograph or drawing of a human brain that has ever been
 recorded.”






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