Finger, Stanley.
Stanley Finger Psychologue, historien des neurosciences
Finger, Stanley, 19..-....
Finger, Stanley 1943-
Finger, S.
VIAF ID: 93346789 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/93346789
Preferred Forms
- 200 _ | ‡a Finger ‡b Stanley
- 100 1 _ ‡a Finger, S.
- 100 1 _ ‡a Finger, Stanley
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Finger, Stanley
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Finger, Stanley
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Finger, Stanley ‡d 1943-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Finger, Stanley, ‡d 19..-....
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- 100 0 _ ‡a Stanley Finger ‡c Psychologue, historien des neurosciences
5xx's: Related Names (2)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Alexander Crichton (1763-1856). Disorders of fluent speech and associationist theory | |
Alexander von Humboldt: galvanism, animal electricity, and self-experimentation part 2: the electric eel, animal electricity, and later years | |
The animal spirit doctrine and the origins of neurophysiology | |
Benjamin Franklin and his glass armonica: from music as therapeutic to pathological. | |
Benjamin Franklin and shock-induced amnesia | |
Benjamin Franklin's risk factors for gout and stones: from genes and diet to possible lead poisoning. | |
Brain injury and recovery : theoretical and controversial issues | |
Brain, mind, and medicine : essays in eighteenth-century neuroscience | |
Chapter 1: ancient trepanation | |
Chapter 10: the birth of localization theory | |
Chapter 14: landmarks of surgical neurology and the interplay of disciplines | |
Chapter 51: recovery of function: redundancy and vicariation theories | |
David Hartley's psychobiological associationism and the legacy of Aristotle. | |
Discovering the African freshwater "torpedo": legendary Ethiopia, religious controversies, and a catfish capable of reanimating dead fish | |
Doctor Franklin's medicine | |
Does the right hemisphere take over after damage to Broca’s area? the Barlow case of 1877 and its history | |
Donaldson, Henry Herbert (1857-1938), neurobiologist | |
Dr. Alexander Garden, a Linnaean in colonial America, and the saga of five "electric eels". | |
Early brain damage | |
An Early Description of ADHD (Inattentive Subtype): Dr Alexander Crichton and ‘Mental Restlessness’ (1798) | |
An early description of Crouzon syndrome in a manuscript written in 1828 by Franz Joseph Gall | |
Edward Bancroft's "Torporific Eels" | |
The “Eels” of South America: Mid-18th-Century Dutch Contributions to the Theory of Animal Electricity | |
The fine arts, neurology, and neuroscience | |
Five early accounts of phantom limb in context: Paré, Descartes, Lemos, Bell, and Mitchell | |
Francis Schiller (1909-2003). | |
Franz Joseph Gall : naturalist of the mind, visionary of the brain | |
Franz Joseph Gall on hemispheric symmetries | |
Franz Joseph Gall on the Cerebellum as the Organ for the Reproductive Drive | |
Franz Joseph Gall on the "deaf and dumb" and the complexities of mind | |
Franz Joseph Gall's non-cortical faculties and their organs | |
Gall, Spurzheim, and the phrenological movement : insights and perspectives | |
Gall's German enemies | |
Hector Landouzy on facial paralysis in newborn children: the case studies of a 19th-century French hospital physician | |
Holes in the Head: The Art and Archeology of Trepanation in Ancient Peru, by John W. Verano | |
The lady and the eel: how Aphra Behn introduced Europeans to the "numb eel". | |
Lord Byron's physician: John William Polidori on somnambulism | |
Ludwig Heinrich Bojanus (1776-1827) on Gall's craniognomic system, zoology, and comparative anatomy | |
Mark Twain, Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, and the head readers : literature, humor, and faddish phrenology | |
Mark Twain's life-long fascination with phrenology | |
Mark Twain's phrenological experiment: Three renditions of his "small test" | |
Medical electricity and madness in the 18th century: the legacies of Benjamin Franklin and Jan Ingenhousz | |
Minds behind the brain a history of the pioneers and their discoveries | |
The Monakow concept of diaschisis: origins and perspectives | |
The Music of Madness: Franklin's Armonica and the Vulnerable Nervous System | |
Neurological and psychiatric disorders | |
The neuroscience of Helmholtz and the theories of Johannes Müller. Part 2: Sensation and perception | |
Obituary: Christopher Smith (1930-2013). | |
Obituary:Rita Levi-Montalcini (1909-2012). | |
On the origins of organology: Franz Joseph Gall and a girl named Bianchi | |
Origins of neuroscience : a history of explorations into brain function | |
The overlooked literary path to modern electrophysiology: philosophical dialogues, novels, and travel books. | |
Pearl S. Buck and phenylketonuria (PKU). | |
Peter Mark Roget: physician, scientist, systematist; his thesaurus and his impact on 19th-century neuroscience | |
Phantom Penis: Historical Dimensions | |
Preface | |
The reception of Gall's organology in early-nineteenth-century Vilnius | |
The role of The Gentleman's Magazine in the dissemination of knowledge about electric fish in the eighteenth century. | |
shocking history of electric fishes from ancient epochs to the birth of modern neurophysiology | |
Sleepwalking through history: medicine, arts, and courts of law. | |
Somnambulism in Verdi's Macbeth and Bellini's La Sonnambula: opera, sleepwalking, and medicine. | |
Stephanus Bisius (1724-1790) on mania and melancholy, and the disorder called plica polonica | |
This special arts issue | |
Thomas Willis: The Functional Organization of the Brain | |
Trepanation history, discovery, theory | |
William Porterfield (ca. 1696–1771) and His Phantom Limb: An Overlooked First Self-report by a Man of Medicine | |
Women and the history of the neurosciences | |
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