Harrington, Anne. So human a brain. Boston: Birkhauser. 1992 WALTER A. ROSENBLITH. Footnotes to the Recent History of Neuroscience: Personal Reflections and Microstories. The workshop upon which this volume is based offered me an opportunity to renew contact fairly painlessly with workers in the brain sciences, not just as a participant/observer but maybe as what might be called a teller of microstories. I had originally become curious about the brain by way of my wife\u27s senior thesis, in which she attempted to relate electroencephalography to certain aspects of human behavior. As a then-budding physicist and communications engineer, I had barely heard about brain waves, nor had I studied physiology in a systematic way. My work on noise ...
limited, largely restricting itself to domains in which there is reasonable hope of attaining real u...
I believe that the most intriguing thing in the world, be sides the world itself, is the human brai...
Paying homage to the brain is an exercise in futility and under-statement, and as such, it is perhap...
Over time, numerous neuroscientists and nano scientists have tried to chart the function of every ne...
Throughout its history, humankind has been fascinated by a question that is simple to pose, yet rema...
The tremendous expansion and the differentiation of the neocortex constitute two major events in the...
Nowadays is a unique time in the history of humankind because the accumulation of fundamental scient...
Although considerable progress can be made by asking general questions about the functions of differ...
The human brain represents the product of an ongoing, six-billion-year construction project. In its ...
Until recently, information about the brain could be obtained only through animal studies or human a...
Brain research offers the unique possibility of glimps-ing at what the human mind is made of. The la...
Throughout your lifetime, the computer has been the dominant metaphor for the mind, prompting many c...
The brain is our most important organ and perhaps the least well understood. Our brain is the “comma...
To understand a human brain, one must understand the cultures in which it was formed. One ultimate t...
Buhmann J, Divko R, Ritter H, Schulten K. Physicists Explore Human and Artificial Intelligence. In: ...
limited, largely restricting itself to domains in which there is reasonable hope of attaining real u...
I believe that the most intriguing thing in the world, be sides the world itself, is the human brai...
Paying homage to the brain is an exercise in futility and under-statement, and as such, it is perhap...
Over time, numerous neuroscientists and nano scientists have tried to chart the function of every ne...
Throughout its history, humankind has been fascinated by a question that is simple to pose, yet rema...
The tremendous expansion and the differentiation of the neocortex constitute two major events in the...
Nowadays is a unique time in the history of humankind because the accumulation of fundamental scient...
Although considerable progress can be made by asking general questions about the functions of differ...
The human brain represents the product of an ongoing, six-billion-year construction project. In its ...
Until recently, information about the brain could be obtained only through animal studies or human a...
Brain research offers the unique possibility of glimps-ing at what the human mind is made of. The la...
Throughout your lifetime, the computer has been the dominant metaphor for the mind, prompting many c...
The brain is our most important organ and perhaps the least well understood. Our brain is the “comma...
To understand a human brain, one must understand the cultures in which it was formed. One ultimate t...
Buhmann J, Divko R, Ritter H, Schulten K. Physicists Explore Human and Artificial Intelligence. In: ...
limited, largely restricting itself to domains in which there is reasonable hope of attaining real u...
I believe that the most intriguing thing in the world, be sides the world itself, is the human brai...
Paying homage to the brain is an exercise in futility and under-statement, and as such, it is perhap...