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  1. William Grey Walter fue un neurólogo norteamericano, experto en robótica y neurofísica. Nació en Kansas City, Missouri el 19 de febrero de 1910. Vivió en Inglaterra desde 1915 donde realizó su carrera de investigador. Estudió en Westminster School y luego en el King's College, de Cambridge, en 1931.

  2. Grey Walter's best-known work was his construction of some of the first electronic autonomous robots. He wanted to prove that rich connections between a small number of brain cells could give rise to very complex behaviors - essentially that the secret of how the brain worked lay in how it was wired up.

  3. William Grey Walter fue un neurólogo norteamericano, experto en robótica y neurofísica. Nació en Kansas City, Missouri el 19 de febrero de 1910. Vivió en Inglaterra desde 1915 donde realizó su carrera de investigador. Estudió en Westminster School y luego en el King's College, de Cambridge, en 1931.

  4. 1 de feb. de 2006 · William Grey Walter, a young researcher finishing his post-graduate studies at Cambridge, was selected to construct and study the EEG in clinical neurology at the Maudsley Hospital, London. His hugely productive pioneering career in the use of EEG would eventually lead to groundbreaking work in other fields —the emerging sciences ...

  5. 19 de feb. de 2022 · William Grey Walter was a pioneer of both electroencephalography (EEG) and cybernetics (the science of control systems). Trained as a neurophysiologist, he was possessed of the technical skill and the imagination to develop EEG into both a diagnostic tool and a means...

  6. Nationality: American. (1910-1977), neurophysiologist. William Grey Walter (also known as Grey Walter) was born in Kansas City, Missouri, on 19 February 1910 to journalist parents Karl Wilhelm Walter (1880-1965) and Minerva (Margaret) Lucrezia Hardy (1879-1953).

  7. For it was there that (William) Grey Walter, who was in charge for more than 30 years, created the first autonomous robots. His ‘tortoises’, complete with primitive neural pathways, led to new insights into the function of the nervous system, and to Grey Walter becoming recognised as a founding father of cybernetics.