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  1. 3 de ene. de 2022 · Brenda Milner’s studies in the 1960s that frontal lobe function was much more interesting than was appreciated and her discoveries redefined our understanding of the frontal lobes. Brenda Milner’s opportunity to introduce her work on frontal lobe came at a large symposium on the Frontal Granular Cortex and Behavior held at Pennsylvania State University in 1962, with the chapters being ...

  2. Brenda Milner (née Langford) was born in Manchester, England on July 15, 1918 to two musically gifted parents. She did not desire a musical career and instead began to study mathematics at Newnham College, Cambridge in 1936. Partway through her studies, she changed programs, entering the field of experimental psychology and earning her BA in 1939.

  3. 13 de sept. de 2018 · Brenda Milner, en 1956. La investigadora debió desplazarse numerosas veces de Montreal a Hartford y, en cada visita, tuvo que presentarse con Molaison, ya que no la reconocía por las secuelas de ...

  4. www.cdnmedhall.ca › laureates › brendamilnerBrenda Milner, PhD | CMHF

    Brenda Milner authored a now renowned publication, “Intellectual Function of the Temporal Lobes" Brain & Mind. In the article, she pinpointed how damage to the temporal lobe can significantly alter the emotional and intellectual abilities in humans and lower primates.

  5. 10 Brenda Milner, neuropsychologue (1918-) . Florence Piron. Une des chercheuses les plus prestigieuses du Québec, Brenda Milner a contribué de façon fondamentale au développement de la recherche sur le cerveau, en particulier sur les mécanismes de la mémoire, dans des travaux qui ont fondé le champ de la neuroscience cognitive.

  6. Brenda Milner (Manchester, 15 de julho de 1918) é uma neuropsicologista canadense, que contribuiu extensamente para a pesquisa literária sobre vários tópicos na área da neuropsicologia clínica, [1] referenciada algumas vezes como "a fundadora da neuropsicologia".

  7. For thirty years, Brenda Milner, a neuropsychologist with the Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI), worked with a patient known as HM. Through her encounters with him, Milner would establish her reputation as one of the most important neuroscientists of the twentieth century, and make HM famous. Yet after three decades, he never remembered her name. HM had lost the ability to convert short ...