It is presumed that a permanent stoppage of electrical activity indicates the end of consciousness. Those that view that only the neo-cortex[?] of the brain is necessary for consciousness, however, sometimes argue that only electrical activity there should be considered when defining death.
In most places the more conservative definition of death (cessation of electrical activity in the whole brain, as opposed to just in the neo-cortex) has been adopted (for example the Uniform Definition of Death Act[?] in the United States). Protocols for determining brain death generally require two EEGs showing no electrical activity, taken 24 hours apart. The absense of brain activity (including brain stem activity) necessarily implies that the patient is incapable of maintaining heartbeat or breathing unassisted by a respirator; and that cerebral reflexes are absent.
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