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Examples

  • It is not infrequently found in these patients; but Prof. Bartholow contends that even in such cases we should "consider its presence, in general, as accidental."

    Plain Facts for Old and Young John Harvey Kellogg 1897

  • Bartholow and Bryan report unilateral sweating of the head.

    Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine 1896

  • Bartholow and Bryan report unilateral sweating of the head.

    Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine 1896

  • Bartholow himself admits some injury; he says that to repeat the experiments "would be in the highest degree criminal."

    An Ethical Problem Or, Sidelights upon Scientific Experimentation on Man and Animals Albert Leffingwell 1880

  • Let us hope that the next defender of these experiments, writing not only for the instruction of the medical profession but also for the general public, will proceed along somewhat different lines; that every symptom which Bartholow mentions, he will mention also; that if he speaks of the "CONSENT" of the victim, he will frankly tell us that it was consent of one whom the experimenter himself called rather

    An Ethical Problem Or, Sidelights upon Scientific Experimentation on Man and Animals Albert Leffingwell 1880

  • But now Prof. Bartholow has discovered their great merits and written the latter up especially, and what I and Prof. Dodd, (V. S.,) wrote a third of a century ago will be credited to others.

    Buchanan's Journal of Man, October 1887 Volume 1, Number 9 1856

  • In what promises to be endless entertainment for the research assistants, Bartholow is pursuing the use of an fMRI functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging - or scans that measure brain activity machine to take measurements of the study participants.

    msnbc.com: Top msnbc.com headlines 2011

  • Bartholow's team noted that while all the groups made mistakes, those which had consumed alcohol were less likely to notice their errors.

    msnbc.com: Top msnbc.com headlines 2011

  • "I suppose the main implication is that people shouldn't assume 'I was drunk' is a good excuse for doing things one knows he or she shouldn't be doing," wrote the study's author, Dr. Bruce Bartholow of the University of Missouri, in an e-mail.

    msnbc.com: Top msnbc.com headlines 2011

  • "It's not as though people do drunken things because they're not aware of their behavior, but rather they seem to be less bothered by the implications or consequences of their behavior than they normally would be," Bartholow added.

    msnbc.com: Top msnbc.com headlines 2011

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