Fritsch, Hitzig, and the Electrical Stimulation of the Cortex
April 19, 2026 | by David Czerwinski
Mapping the Motor Areas
An MVP version of Chapter 19 Volume 1 of the Neuroscience Edition
The 1870s marked a pivotal moment in neuroscience: the first direct electrical stimulation of the living brain to produce movement. Gustav Fritsch (1838–1927) and Eduard Hitzig (1838–1907) performed groundbreaking experiments on dogs, demonstrating that specific cortical areas control voluntary movement. This discovery provided the first concrete evidence of functional localization in the cortex.
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Gustav Fritsch, co-pioneer of cortical electrical stimulation (credit: Wikimedia)
In 1870 Berlin, Fritsch and Hitzig applied weak electrical currents to a dog’s exposed brain. Stimulation of the left frontal cortex moved the right foreleg. Different spots produced different movements. They mapped the cortex systematically, proving voluntary movement originates in specific areas.
Fritsch noticed contralateral paralysis in head-wounded soldiers during the Franco-Prussian War. Hitzig theorized cortical control. Their 1870 paper, “On the Electrical Excitability of the Cerebrum,” showed:
- Precentral gyrus stimulation produced precise movements.
- No response from posterior cortex.
- Contralateral control.
This established the motor cortex as movement’s origin.
Their work inspired David Ferrier (1873), mapping sensory/motor areas in monkeys. Wilder Penfield later used cortical stimulation in awake patients—mapping the homunculus.
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Eduard Hitzig, co-pioneer of cortical electrical stimulation (credit: Wikimedia)
Fritsch and Hitzig’s legacy: first experimental cortical localization, shifting neurology to science. Their method remains key in epilepsy surgery and brain-computer interfaces.
As we approach 20th-century pioneers, Fritsch and Hitzig highlight experimental mapping—foundation for understanding brain adaptability.
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