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  2. Gate control theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gate_control_theory

    Melzack's description has been adapted by the International Association for the Study of Pain in a contemporary definition of pain. [1] Despite flaws in its presentation of neural architecture, the theory of gate control is currently the only theory that most accurately accounts for the physical and psychological aspects of pain. [2]

  3. Ronald Melzack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronald_Melzack

    Ronald Melzack OC OQ FRSC (July 19, 1929 – December 22, 2019) was a Canadian psychologist and professor of psychology at McGill University. [1] [2] In 1965, he and Patrick David Wall re-charged pain research by introducing the gate control theory of pain.

  4. Textbook of Pain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textbook_of_Pain

    Wall & Melzack's Textbook of Pain is a medical textbook published by Elsevier. It is named after Patrick David Wall and Ronald Melzack, who introduced the gate control theory into pain research in the 1960s. First released in 1984, the book has been described as "the most comprehensive scientific reference text in the field of pain medicine".

  5. Patrick D. Wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_D._Wall

    At Melzack's urging they wrote a paper on the Gate control theory of pain and published it in Brain in 1962; according to Wall it was read by around three people. After expanding and rewriting the article they republished it as Pain Mechanisms: a new theory in Science in 1965 where it drew wider attention, with mostly negative comments. [11]

  6. Pain theories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pain_theories

    William Kenneth Livingston advanced a summation theory in 1943, proposing that high intensity signals, arriving at the spinal cord from damage to nerve or tissue, set up a reverberating, self-exciting loop of activity in a pool of interneurons, and once a threshold of activity is crossed, these interneurons then activate "transmission" cells ...

  7. Classical control theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_control_theory

    Classical control theory is a branch of control theory that deals with the behavior of dynamical systems with inputs, and how their behavior is modified by feedback, using the Laplace transform as a basic tool to model such systems.

  8. Switching circuit theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switching_circuit_theory

    Switching circuit theory is the mathematical study of the properties of networks of idealized switches. Such networks may be strictly combinational logic, in which their output state is only a function of the present state of their inputs; or may also contain sequential elements, where the present state depends on the present state and past states; in that sense, sequential circuits are said ...

  9. Template:Control theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Control_theory

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