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  1. 1 de abr. de 2004 · Thomas Willis (1621–1675), the founder of clinical neuroscience. Z. Molnár. Published in Nature Reviews Neuroscience 1 April 2004. Medicine. TLDR. Thomas Willis is considered to be one of the greatest neuroanatomists of all time, and his work formed the foundation of basic neuroanatomical description and nomenclature, and comparative ...

  2. Thomas Willis. Thomas Willis established neurology as a distinct discipline and made significant original contributions to many related fields including anatomy, pathology, cardiology, endocrinology, and gastroenterology. He is most remembered for his work in elucidating the function and anatomy of the circle of W ….

  3. 1 de nov. de 2021 · Thomas Willis (1621-1675). Willis enrolled in the University of Oxford on March 3, 1637, received his Bachelor of Arts (chemistry) on June 12, 1639, and a Master of Arts on June 18, 1642. Known as a royalist, Willis participated in the Earl of Dover’s auxiliary regiment against the Parliamentarians.

  4. Thomas Willis. (Great Bedwin, 1621 - Londres, 1675) Médico inglés. Profesor en la Universidad de Oxford, formó parte de un núcleo de estudiantes y profesores interesados por aquella época en el desarrollo de las ciencias, como Robert Boyle, Robert Hooke, Christopher Wren o John Locke. Thomas Willis estudió en especial el sistema nervioso ...

  5. Thomas Willis (1621 - 1675) 400th Birthday - Alastair Compston in conversation with Zoltán Molnár: An insight into the writings of Willis. 27 January 2021. Professor Zoltán Molnár talks to Professor Emeritus of Neurology Alastair Compston FRS about the deeply influential texts written by the Founder of Neurology Thomas Willis four centuries ...

  6. Thomas Willis (1621-1675) is recognized as the founder of clinical neuroscience. He conceived the word “neurologie” and, although immortalized by the arterial anastamosis at the base of the brain, his contributions to neuroscience were far wider and equally fundamental. This paper examines Willis’ descriptions of cere-

  7. WILLIS, THOMAS, M.D. (1621–1675), physician, son of Thomas Willis and his wife, Rachel Howell, was born at Great Bedwin, Wiltshire, on 27 Jan. 1620–1, and baptised on 14 Feb. following. His father, a farmer at ‘Church or Long Handborough,’ Oxfordshire, was, according to Wood, ‘a retainer of S. John's College,’ and afterwards steward to Sir Walter Smith of Bedwyn, retiring in his ...