Alexander Robertson (1834–1908) was a Glasgow physician whose professional career was involved mainly with institutional-based practice but who published significant insights into the anatomical background to aphasia (1867) and the mechanisms of focal epileptogenesis (1869). His aphasiology ideas, including his suggestion that disconnection between cerebral centers involved in speech was responsible for the phenomenon, made him one of the earliest members of the late-nineteenth-century school of aphasia diagram makers. His view of epileptogenesis was that contralateral convulsing arose from irritation in a local area of pathology on the surface of the cerebral cortex after the irritation spread to a cortical motor center and then down the m...
To describe Victor Horsley's contribution to John Hughlings Jackson's understanding of the mechanism...
John Hughlings Jackson was a pioneer in neurology who thought deeply about the structure of the brai...
James Ross (1837-1892) was an Aberdeen medical graduate who, after 13 years in rural general practic...
The National Hospital for Paralysis and Epilepsy in London (founded 1859) was the scene of great dis...
Although it is known that Jacksonian epilepsy was first described by Bravais in 1827, some 40 years ...
By the beginning of the XIXth Century the old belief that epilepsy was due to demonic possession or ...
To trace the concept that the cerebral cortex is the site of epileptogenesis before Hughlings Jackso...
Sir John Russell Reynolds was an eminent and highly influential physician in the Victorian era who h...
Abstract In the 1860s John Hughlings Jackson (1835-1911) reasoned on theoretical grounds that volunt...
William Aldren Turner (1864-1945), in his day Physician to the National Hospital, Queen Square, and ...
Throughout his medical career, Robert Dunn (1799-1877) published a number of clinical cases with pos...
In the 1870s, early in his neurologic career, William Gowers (1845-1911) was exposed to three main s...
Background: According to many aphasiologists the scientific study of aphasia dates back to the secon...
There was an increasing medical interest in the localization of representation of function in the ce...
By 1870, and within 5 or 6 years of his beginning to analyse the clinical phenomena of epilepsy and ...
To describe Victor Horsley's contribution to John Hughlings Jackson's understanding of the mechanism...
John Hughlings Jackson was a pioneer in neurology who thought deeply about the structure of the brai...
James Ross (1837-1892) was an Aberdeen medical graduate who, after 13 years in rural general practic...
The National Hospital for Paralysis and Epilepsy in London (founded 1859) was the scene of great dis...
Although it is known that Jacksonian epilepsy was first described by Bravais in 1827, some 40 years ...
By the beginning of the XIXth Century the old belief that epilepsy was due to demonic possession or ...
To trace the concept that the cerebral cortex is the site of epileptogenesis before Hughlings Jackso...
Sir John Russell Reynolds was an eminent and highly influential physician in the Victorian era who h...
Abstract In the 1860s John Hughlings Jackson (1835-1911) reasoned on theoretical grounds that volunt...
William Aldren Turner (1864-1945), in his day Physician to the National Hospital, Queen Square, and ...
Throughout his medical career, Robert Dunn (1799-1877) published a number of clinical cases with pos...
In the 1870s, early in his neurologic career, William Gowers (1845-1911) was exposed to three main s...
Background: According to many aphasiologists the scientific study of aphasia dates back to the secon...
There was an increasing medical interest in the localization of representation of function in the ce...
By 1870, and within 5 or 6 years of his beginning to analyse the clinical phenomena of epilepsy and ...
To describe Victor Horsley's contribution to John Hughlings Jackson's understanding of the mechanism...
John Hughlings Jackson was a pioneer in neurology who thought deeply about the structure of the brai...
James Ross (1837-1892) was an Aberdeen medical graduate who, after 13 years in rural general practic...