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         Sperry Roger W:     more detail
  1. Biography - Sperry, Roger W(olcott) (1913-1994): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2002-01-01
  2. Brain Circuits and Functions of the Mind Essays in Honor of Roger W. Sperry by Colwyn Trevarthen, 1980
  3. Advances in Neurobiology and Brain Function: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Evelyn B. Kelly, 2001
  4. The growth of nerve circuits ([Scientific American offprints]) by Roger Wolcott Sperry, 1959

61. Roger Wolcott Sperry
sperry, roger Wolcott (The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition). sperry, rogerWolcott (19131994) (The Hutchinson Encyclopedia)
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0846254.html
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62. Nobel Prizes (table)
Kenichi Fukui Roald Hoffmann, Nicolaas Bloembergen Arthur Schawlow Kai M.Siegbahn, roger W. sperry David H. Hubel Torsten N. Wiesel, Elias Canetti
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63. Mind - Epilogue
Writing in the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, Professor roger W. sperry, sperry, roger W., Mind, Brain, and Humanist Values, Bulletin of the Atomic
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Table of Contents Chapter 1 Chapter 2 ... Chapter 6 Epilogue Response Further Reading The Mysterious Matter of Mind Epilogue Beyond Philosophy
Since the search for origins and the search for destinies are both admittedly outside the province of scientific inquiry, it seems we are left with only metaphysical speculation. But such speculation has not led to any profound certainty hitherto. It is clear that it lacks the kind of raw data with which science proceeds toward understanding. Where, then, is this data to be found?
The usual reply is: Ask those who have experienced the "blowing out of the candle" and returned. But this source of information is unsatisfactory because it varies so widely from person to person and there is no absolute assurance that the candle was really blown out in the first place. We seem to be left with no alternative but to turn to biblical Revelation, a remarkable account which has carried untold millions who were guided by it through the most severe testings imaginable with an absolute assurance of survival in peace and joy on the other side of the grave. pg.1 of 6

64. Man (Vol.3) - Pt.VI, CH.2
sperry, roger W., Mind, Brain and Humanist Values, Bulletin of the AtomicScientist, Sept., 1966, p.243. 39. Adrian, Lord, The Brain as Physics, Science
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Table of Contents Part I Part II ... Part VIII Part VI: The Subconscious and Forgiveness of Sins Chapter 2 What Can Be Erased and How? THE RESISTANCE OF memory to erasure by various experimental techniques is almost unbelievable. In fact, Ralph Gerard said that the brain of an animal can be so mutilated without apparently disturbing its memory of learned behaviour that it almost looks as though the skull might be filled with cotton batten for all the difference it makes how you poke at it. Furthermore, the things which a dog has once learned to do it does not forget, even if it is robbed of its cerebral cortex altogether! ( So can one erase memory at all?
In one series of experiments performed by Gerard, hamsters were trained to run a maze to reach a source of food. Once they had memorized the proper course, various treatments of shock and surgery were employed to make them forget, but without success. Even more remarkable were experiments carried out with white rats which subsequently underwent the most severe cerebral mutilations imaginable. Incisions were made in the brain tissue itself in every conceivable direction, deep and long. Just to see the diagram of these incisions would convince anyone unfamiliar with the results of these experiments that the animals could not possibly have survived such operations. Yet the extraordinary thing is that not only did the rats survive, but there was no measurable impairment of memory. Dr. Gerard comments:

65. Index To Scientists And Engineers Biographical File (Library Of Congress)
SPARKS, WILLIAM J. P, BIB. SPEDDING, FH BIO, BIB. SPENCER, DC BIO, BIB. sperry,roger W. P, BIB. SPIEGELMAN, SOL BIB. SPITZER, LYMAN, JR. P, BIB
http://www.loc.gov/rr/scitech/sci-eng-nz.html
Index to the
Scientists and Engineers Biographical File
About the Scientists and Engineers Biographical File What is the Scientists and Engineers Biographical File? The File contains information on scientists who were prominent in the early 1970s. It consists of folders containing photographs, biographical information and bibliographies of 1200 American and 100 foreign scientists and engineers. How was the collection formed? The collection was formed during the years 1972 - 75, when The Science and Technology Division solicited the materials as gifts from members of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineers. Other scientists included those listed in Who's Who in Science, Engineers of Distinction, winners of the National Medal for Science, and Scientists in Search of Their Consciences. The division asked Nobel Prize recipients in the sciences to submit portraits and a print of their award ceremony. Who should use the The Scientists and Engineers Biographical File? The archive is useful to researchers needing pictorial material for publications, and anyone who needs bibliographical (that is, materials created by or about the scientist) and biographical information on many well known and lesser known scientists and engineers of the mid-twentieth century.

66. AllRefer.com - Roger Wolcott Sperry (Biology, Biography) - Encyclopedia
roger Wolcott sperry 1913–94, American biologist, b. Hartford, Conn., Ph.D. Univ.of More articles from AllRefer Reference on roger Wolcott sperry
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67. John Locke Bibliography Name/Title Index S
Smith, roger W. 1975. “The economy of guilt.” Smith, Thomas V. 1940. (ed. sperry, Stuart M. 1973. Keats the poet. Spicher, —.
http://www.libraries.psu.edu/tas/locke/ns.html

68. Especiales Diario Médico
Translate this page El nóbel del año. roger W. sperry, David H. Hubel y Torsten N. Wiesel roger W.sperry nació en Hartford (Connecticut, Estados Unidos) en 1913.
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Roger W. Sperry, David H. Hubel y Torsten N. Wiesel Roger W. Sperry Roger W. Sperry
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69. The View Both Ways
11 roger W. sperry, Science and Moral Priority Merging Mind, Brain, and HumanValues (New York Columbia University Press, 1983), 117.
http://www.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk/cis/murphy/lecture2.html
Excursus: Defining Downward Causation
There has been a developing literature on downward or top-down causation over the past 40 years. Philosophical theologian Austin Farrer was clearly groping for such a concept in his 1957 Gifford Lectures. Seeking a way to argue that higher-level patterns of action . . . may do some real work and thus not be reducible to the mass effect of lower-level constituents, he says that "in cellular organization the molecular constituents are caught up and as it were bewitched by larger patters of action, and cells in their turn by the animal body" [10]. Farrer's metaphor of higher-level organizations bewitching the lower-level constituents is the sort of talk that deepens the mystery rather than clarifies it. Psychologist Roger Sperry sometimes speaks of the properties of the higher-level entity or system overpowering the causal forces of the component entities [11]. However, elsewhere Sperry refers to Donald Campbell's account of downward causation. Here there is no talk of bewitching or overpowering lower-level causal processes, but instead a thoroughly non- mysterious account of a larger system of causal factors having a selective effect on lower-level entities and their causal effects. Campbell's example is the role of natural selection in producing the efficient jaw structures of worker termites and ants.
Consider the anatomy of the jaws of a worker termite or ant. The hinge surfaces and the muscle attachments agree with Archimedes' laws of levers, that is, with macromechanics. They are optimally designed to apply maximum force at a useful distance from the hinge. . . . This is a kind of conformity to physics, but a different kind than is involved in the molecular, atomic, strong and weak coupling processes underlying the formation of the particular proteins of the muscle and shell of which the system is constructed. The laws of levers are one part of the complex selective system operating at the level of whole organisms. Selection at that level has optimised viability, and has thus optimised the form of parts of organisms, for the worker termite and ant and for their solitary ancestors. We need the laws of levers, and

70. The Alfred B. Nobel Prize Winners: Physiology Or Medicine
1981, roger W. sperry David H. Hubel Tosten N. Wiesel, United States United StatesUnited States. 1982, Sune Bergström Bengt Samuelsson John R. Vane, Sweden
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Nobel Prize Winners for Physiology or Medicine
Chemistry Physics Literature Peace ... Economics Emil A. von Behring Germany Sir Ronald Ross Great Britain Niels R. Finsen Denmark Ivan P. Pavlov Russia Robert Koch Germany Camillo Golgi
Santiago Ramon y Cajal Italy
Spain Charles L. A. Laveran France Paul Ehrlich
Elie Metchnikoff Germany
France Emil Theodor Kocher Switzerland Albrecht Kossel Germany Allvar Gullstrand Sweden Alexis Carrel France Charles R. Richet France Robert Barany Austria Jules Bordet Belgium Schack A. S. Krogh Demmark Archibald V. Hill
Otto F. Meyerhof Great Britain
Germany Frederick G. Banting
John J. R. Macleod Canada
Scotland Willem Einthoven Netherlands Johannes A. G. Fibiger Danmark Julius Wagner-Jauregg Austria Charles J. H. Nicolle

71. Psychological Images In Publication--S
sperry, roger W. American Psychologist, v. 50, July 1995, p. 506. sperry, rogerWolcott American Psychologist, 1972, 27, 65. Spiegelberg, Herbert
http://www.apa.org/archives/psyimages.html
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Psychological Images in PublicationS
A B C D ... XYZ Saarni, Carolyn
Contemporary Psychology, 1993, 38, 1265 Sabshin, Melvin
Barton (1987) plate 19 Saccone, Anthony J.
Consulting Psychology Journal, 1993, 45, 75 Sachs, Hanns
Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 1947, 16, 151-156 Sachs, Hanns, in group photo with Freud's followers, 1922
Contemporary Psychology, 1958, 3, 146
Zilboorg, History of medical psychology, 1941, 472 Safa, Helen I.
Psychology Today, September 1970, p. 26 Safran, Jeremy D.
Contemporary Psychology, 1992, 37, 1130 Saint-Exupery, Antoine De
Psychology Today, August 1970, p. 55 (Artist portrait) Saks, Michael J.
American Psychologist, 1988, 43, 253 Sales, Bruce D. American Psychologist, 1996, #51, 334 Salmon, Henry S., Jr.

72. Eminent Psychologists Of The 20th Century
roger W. sperry. 45. Edward C. Tolman. 46. Stanley Milgram. 47. Arthur R. Jensen.48. Lee J. Cronbach. 49. John Bowlby. 50. Wolfgang Köhler
http://www.apa.org/monitor/julaug02/eminent.html

page 29
Volume 33, No. 7 July/August 2002 document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write('');
Eminent psychologists of the 20th century
page 29
1. B.F. Skinner 2. Jean Piaget 3. Sigmund Freud 4. Albert Bandura 5. Leon Festinger 6. Carl R. Rogers 7. Stanley Schachter 8. Neal E. Miller 9. Edward Thorndike 10. A.H. Maslow 11. Gordon W. Allport 12. Erik H. Erikson 13. Hans J. Eysenck 14. William James 15. David C. McClelland 16. Raymond B. Cattell 17. John B. Watson 18. Kurt Lewin 19. Donald O. Hebb 20. George A. Miller 21. Clark L. Hull 22. Jerome Kagan 23. Carl G. Jung 24. Ivan P. Pavlov 25. Walter Mischel 26. Harry F. Harlow 27. J.P. Guilford 28. Jerome S. Bruner 29. Ernest R. Hilgard 30. Lawrence Kohlberg 31. Martin E.P. Seligman 32. Ulric Neisser 33. Donald T. Campbell 34. Roger Brown 35. R.B. Zajonc 36. Endel Tulving 37. Herbert A. Simon 38. Noam Chomsky 39. Edward E. Jones 40. Charles E. Osgood 41. Solomon E. Asch 42. Gordon H. Bower

73. Mind And Brain: The Many Faceted Problems
roger W. Wescott 19. The Mechanism of Knowledge Limits to Prediction JWS PringleCommentary roger sperry 24. Individual Existence Bradley T. Scheer
http://www.paragonhouse.com/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=25_27&products_id=25

74. Nobel-medicina
1981 roger W. sperry, David H. Hubel, Torsten N. Wiesel 1980 Baruj Benacerraf,Jean Dausset, George D. Snell 1979 Allan M. Cormack, Godfrey N. Hounsfield
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Premios Nobel de Medicina

2004 Richard Axel, Linda B. Buck
2003 Paul C. Lauterbur, Sir Peter Mansfield
2002 Sydney Brenner, H. Robert Horvitz, John E. Sulston
2001 Leland H. Hartwell, Tim Hunt, Sir Paul Nurse
2000 Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard, Eric R. Kandel
1999 Günter Blobel
1998 Robert F. Furchgott, Louis J. Ignarro, Ferid Murad
1997 Stanley B. Prusiner
1996 Peter C. Doherty, Rolf M. Zinkernagel 1995 Edward B. Lewis, Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard, Eric F. Wieschaus 1994 Alfred G. Gilman, Martin Rodbell 1993 Richard J. Roberts, Phillip A. Sharp 1992 Edmond H. Fischer, Edwin G. Krebs 1991 Erwin Neher, Bert Sakmann 1990 Joseph E. Murray, E. Donnall Thomas 1989 J. Michael Bishop, Harold E. Varmus 1988 Sir James W. Black, Gertrude B. Elion, George H. Hitchings 1987 Susumu Tonegawa 1986 Stanley Cohen, Rita Levi-Montalcini 1985 Michael S. Brown, Joseph L. Goldstein 1984 Niels K. Jerne, Georges J.F. Köhler, César Milstein 1983 Barbara McClintock 1982 Sune K. Bergström, Bengt I. Samuelsson, John R. Vane

75. Monthly Activity Calendar: Sept. 2005 EnchantedLearning.com
Read about the phases of the moon. Potato Day Label the vegetables in Spanish,in French, or in German. 20 roger W. sperry (brain researcher) born, 1913
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Monthly Activity Calendar:
September 2005
Click on the activity to go to crafts printouts Label Me! quizzes , and other activities. Today's Date is: Previous Month September is " Read-A-New-Book Month Next Month September 15 to October 15 is Hispanic Heritage month
Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
Asteroid 3, Juno, discovered, 1804
Read about asteroids
, then take a quiz on them
Queen Liliuokalani born, 1838 (she was the last royal ruler of Hawaii)
Label a map of Hawaii
New Moon Read about the phases of the moon. Viking 2 landed on Mars, 1976 Read about Mars , then take a quiz on it Henry Hudson discovered the island of Manhattan, 1609 Take a quiz on the map of New York state Labor Day (USA) Make a Labor Day collage Voyager 1 launched on a grand tour of the Solar System, 1977 Label the Solar System or make a model of our Solar System Read a book day Write a book report on a book that you enjoyed Brazil Independence Day Brazil became independent from Portugal, 1822.

76. DI CRSC Criticism Of The PBS "Evolution" Series: Counting Nobel Laureates
George D. Snell; 1981 roger W. sperry, David H. Hubel (dual citizenship, David H. Hubel roger sperry, 1981, Studies on the organization and local
http://www.antievolution.org/events/pbsevo/wre_nobel.html
Counting the Nobel laureates... Does it prove what the Discovery Institute says it does?
by Wesley R. Elsberry In their viewer's guide pretentiously (and erroneously, as I will demonstrate below) titled, "Getting the Facts Straight", the Discovery Institute gives us this discussion: The narrator says that anti-evolution efforts following the Scopes trial "had a chilling effect on the teaching of evolution and the publishers of science textbooks. For decades, Darwin seemed to be locked out of America's public schools. But then evolution received an unexpected boost from a very unlikely source the Soviet Union." When the Soviets launched the first man-made satellite, Sputnik, in 1957, Americans were goaded into action. The narrator continues: "As long-neglected science programs were revived in America's classrooms, evolution was, too. Biblical literalists have been doing their best to discredit Darwin's theory ever since." This takes the distortion of history one giant step further. It is blatantly false that U.S. science education was "neglected" after the Scopes trial because Darwinism was "locked out of America's public schools." During those supposedly benighted decades, American schools produced more Nobel Prize-winners than the rest of the world put together. And in physiology and medicine the fields that should have been most stunted by a neglect of Darwinism the U.S. produced fully twice as many Nobel laureates as all other countries combined. How about the U.S. space program? Was it harmed by the supposed neglect of Darwinism in public schools? Contrary to what Evolution implies, the U.S. space program in 1957 was in good shape. The Soviet Union won the race to launch the first satellite because it had made that one of its highest national priorities. The U.S., on the other hand, had other priorities such as caring for its citizens and rebuilding a war-torn world. When Sputnik prodded Americans to put more emphasis on space exploration, the U.S. quickly surpassed the Soviet Union and landed men on the Moon. The necessary resources and personnel were already in place; the U.S. didn't have to wait for a new generation of rocket scientists trained in evolution.

77. 20th Century Year By Year 1981
The prize was awarded one half to sperry, roger W., USA, California Instituteof Technology, Pasadena, CA, b. 1913, d. 1994 for his discoveries
http://www.historycentral.com/20th/1981.html
Major Event/ Sports Nobel Prizes Pulitzer Prizes ... Popular Book s / Popular Television Shows Popular Music/ Grammy Awards/ Tony Awards
Major Events of 1981
Sports Highlights
NBA: Boston Celtics vs. Houston Rockets Series: 4-2
NCAA Football: Clemson Record: 12-0-0
Heisman Trophy: Marcus Allen, usc, RB points: 1,797
Stanley Cup: New York Islanders vs. Minnesota Northstars Series: 4-1
Super Bowl XV: Oakland Raiders vs. Philadelphia Eagles Score: 27-10
US Open Golf: David Graham Score: 273 Course: Merion GC Location: Ardmore, PA
World Series: Los Angeles Dodgers vs. New York Yankees Series: 4-2
Popular Music
1."The Tide is High" ... Blondie
2."Celebration" ... Kool and the Gang
3."9 to 5" ... Dolly Parton
4."I Love a Rainy Night" ... Eddie Rabbit
5."Keep on Loving You" ... REO Speedwagon

78. Nobel Prize For Medicine
roger Guillemin, Andrew V. Schally, Rosalyn Sussman Yalow. 1978. Werner Arber,Daniel Nathans, roger W. sperry, David H. Hubel, Torsten N. Wiesel. 1982
http://www.nndb.com/honors/214/000068010/
This is a beta version of NNDB Search: All Names Living people Dead people Band Names Book Titles Movie Titles Full Text for Nobel Prize for Medicine HONOR Nobel Prize for Medicine. Emil von Behring Ronald Ross Niels Ryberg Finsen Ivan Pavlov Robert Koch Alphonse Laveran Ilya Mechnikov, Paul Ehrlich Theodor Kocher Albrecht Kossel Allvar Gullstrand Alexis Carrel Charles Richet (no award) (no award) (no award) (no award) Jules Bordet August Krogh (no award) Archibald V. Hill, Otto Meyerhof Frederick G. Banting, John Macleod Willem Einthoven (no award) Johannes Fibiger Julius Wagner-Jauregg Charles Nicolle Christiaan Eijkman, Sir Frederick Hopkins Karl Landsteiner Otto Warburg Sir Charles Sherrington, Edgar Adrian Thomas H. Morgan George H. Whipple, George R. Minot, William P. Murphy Hans Spemann Sir Henry Dale, Otto Loewi Corneille Heymans Gerhard Domagk (no award) (no award) (no award) Henrik Dam, Edward A. Doisy Joseph Erlanger, Herbert S. Gasser Alexander Fleming , Ernst B. Chain, Sir Howard Florey Hermann J. Muller Carl Cori, Gerty Cori, Bernardo Houssay Walter Hess, Egas Moniz

79. Nobel Prize In Physiology Or Medicine Chronology 1997 STANLEY B
1981 roger W. sperry for his discoveries concerning the functional specializationof the cerebral hemispheres. DAVID H. HUBEL and TORSTEN N. WIESEL for
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Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Chronology
STANLEY B. PRUSINER for his discovery of Prions - a new biological principle of infection
PETER C. DOHERTY and ROLF M. ZINKERNAGEL for their discoveries concerning the specificity of the cell mediated immune defence.
EDWARD B. LEWIS, CHRISTIANE NÜSSLEIN-VOLHARD and ERIC F. WIESCHAUS for their discoveries concerning the genetic control of early embryonic development.
ALFRED G. GILMAN and MARTIN RODBELL for their discovery of G-proteins and the role of these proteins in signal transduction in cells.
RICHARD J. ROBERTS and PHILLIP A. SHARP for their independent discoveries of split genes.
EDMOND H. FISCHER and EDWIN G. KREBS for their discoveries concerning reversible protein phosphorylation as a biological regulatory mechanism.
ERWIN NEHER and BERT SAKMANN for their discoveries concerning the function of single ion channels in cells.
JOSEPH E. MURRAY and E. DONNALL THOMAS for their discoveries concerning organ and cell transplantation in the treatment of human disease.
J. MICHAEL BISHOP and HAROLD E. VARMUS for their discovery of the cellular origin of retroviral oncogenes.

80. Vesmír - Roger W. Sperry /1913–1994/
Vesmír c. 7 vychází 14.7.2005. Copyright pokrocilé vyhledávání. CDROM Vesmír1994–2003 v prodeji za 495 Kc. Menu. Prihlásit Registrovat
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