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James H. Austin is an American neurologist and author. He is the author of the book Zen and the Brain.It establishes links between the neurophysiology of the human brain and the practice of meditation, and won the Scientific and Medical Network Book Prize for 1998. [1]
James Samuel Risien Russell FRCP (17 September 1863 – 20 March 1939) was a Guyanese-British physician, neurologist, professor of medicine, and professor of medical jurisprudence. [ 3 ] Early life
A. James Hudspeth: 1945– United States Kavli prize in Neuroscience - 2018. [60] John Hughes: 1942– United Kingdom Andrew Huxley: 1917–2012 United Kingdom Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine - 1963. [61] Hodgkin–Huxley model: Laurent Itti: 1970– France Ivan Izquierdo: 1937–2021 Argentina - Brazil Louis Jacobsohn-Lask: 1863–1941 ...
James Waldo Lance AO, CBE (1926–2019), often referred to as James Lance and James W. Lance, was an Australian neurologist.He was the founder of the School of Neurology at the University of New South Wales and president of the International Headache Society in 1987–89, [1] and a "world authority on the diagnosis and treatment" of headache and migraine.
James Winston Watts (January 19, 1904 – November 15, 1994) was an American neurosurgeon, born in Lynchburg, Virginia. He was a graduate of the Virginia Military Institute as well as the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Watts is noteworthy for his professional partnership with the neurologist and psychiatrist Walter Freeman.
James O. McNamara (born September 25, 1942) is an American neurologist and neuroscientist, known for his research of epileptogenesis, the process underlying development and progression of epilepsy. He is the Duke School of Medicine Professor of Neuroscience in the Departments of Neurobiology, Neurology, and Pharmacology and Cancer Biology at ...
Laureates have won the Nobel Prize in a wide range of fields that relate to physiology or medicine. As of 2009, 8 Prizes have been awarded for contributions in the field of signal transduction by G proteins and second messengers , 13 have been awarded for contributions in the field of neurobiology and 13 have been awarded for contributions in ...
James Ramsay Hunt was born in Philadelphia in 1872. [3] He received his M.D. degree from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in 1893. He then studied in Paris, Vienna, and Berlin, and returned to practice neurology in New York, working at Cornell University Medical School from 1900 to 1910 with Charles Loomis Dana.