Born in Manchester, England on July 15, 1918, Brenda Langford is the only child, his father is a music critic, teacher, journalist, his mother is singing in a broken family Young I am a student. When I was fourteen I left school to go to work. Brenda's father did not believe in formal education. Because he believed that he impeded creativity, Brenda was educated at home by the age of eight. At that time, her father was away from tuberculosis and sent to a girls school where she fell in love with several subjects.
British neuropsychologist Brenda Milner is considered "founder of neuropsychology." Milner is doing a lot of research in this field, and I am working at the age of 95. She is currently a professor of neurology and neurosurgery at McGill University. Professor of psychology at the Montreal Neurological Institute. Cognitive psychologist Gordon H. Bower is Albert Ray Run (Deputy Emeritus Professor) of Stanford University Psychology Department. Bower is known for his research on memory and concept learning. I introduced a memory tool called "blocking" that combines objects to improve recall.
Born in Manchester, England on July 15, 1918, Brenda Langford is the only child, his father is a music critic, teacher, journalist, his mother is singing in a broken family Young I am a student. When I was fourteen I left school to go to work. Brenda's father did not believe in formal education. Because he believed that he impeded creativity, Brenda was educated at home by the age of eight. - As he has contributed to the development of rock music, the world of rock has made a great contribution to Bill Graham. In the creation and promotion of rock concerts, his ingenuity helped artists reach the new audience and began a career of several artists. His concerts will provide a better concert experience for the audience and will help improve the performance of performance artists.
In 1952, Brenda Milner obtained his Ph.D. under the guidance of Donald Heber at McGill University. Around this time, she encountered two patients (P. B. and F. C.) who had severe amnestic disorder after unilateral resection of the medial temporal lobe structure to treat epileptic seizures (Penfield and Milner, 1958). This unfortunate result was completely unexpected, suggesting that in each case there is an existing but unexpected atrophic lesion in the medial temporal lobe of the relative hemisphere. In this way, unilateral surgery can lead to bilateral lesions, which is an idea confirmed at the time of autopsy of patient P. B several years later. After two cases were announced at the American Neurosciences Academy Conference in 1955, Wilder Penfield (neurosurgeon in both cases) was called from neurosurgeon William Scoville, Hartford, Connecticut.