Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun An expert in
neuroanatomy .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Examples
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In 1909 the German neuroanatomist Korbinian Brodmann showed that the brain could be mapped into fifty-two distinct regions, each having a specific function.
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In 1909 the German neuroanatomist Korbinian Brodmann showed that the brain could be mapped into fifty-two distinct regions, each having a specific function.
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The neuroanatomist: Jill Bolte Taylor, My Stroke of Insight New York: Viking, 2006, 113, 114, 118.
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Jill Bolte Taylor, a 37-year-old Harvard-trained neuroanatomist, experienced a massive stroke when a blood vessel exploded in the rational, time-oriented left side of her brain.
Michael Bernard Beckwith: Extended Awareness: The Possiblities of Quantum Consciousness
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The neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor came to believe that positive encouragement lay at the heart of her recovery from a stroke that nearly killed her.
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Jill Bolte Taylor, a Harvard-trained neuroanatomist, talks about the euphoria she experienced when, during a stroke, her left-brain functions of linear thinking and using the past to orient the present stopped functioning.
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Jill Bolte Taylor, a 37-year-old Harvard-trained neuroanatomist, experienced a massive stroke when a blood vessel exploded in the rational, time-oriented left side of her brain.
Michael Bernard Beckwith: Extended Awareness: The Possiblities of Quantum Consciousness
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The neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor came to believe that positive encouragement lay at the heart of her recovery from a stroke that nearly killed her.
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Bizet's widow, a Dreyfusard, pursued by the eccentric pianist and composer, Delaborde, "who travelled with two apes and more than a hundred cockatoos" and the mad anti-Dreyfusard neuroanatomist Jules Soury, who inhaled "dried tubercular spittle to hasten his own death", give the tenor of Harris's lightness of touch.
The Man on Devil's Island: Alfred Dreyfus and the Affair that Divided France by Ruth Harris
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The neuroanatomist: Jill Bolte Taylor, My Stroke of Insight New York: Viking, 2006, 113, 114, 118.
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