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  1. Mathilde Carmen Hertz (14 January 1891 – 20 November 1975) was a biologist, and was one of the first influential women scientists in the field of biology and a pioneer in the field of comparative psychology.

  2. Mathilde Carmen Hertz (Bonn, 14 de janeiro de 1891 – Cambridge, Inglaterra, 20 de novembro de 1975) foi uma bióloga alemã, que pesquisou sobre o comportamento de animais.

  3. Scope and Contents Rutherford introduces [Mathilde] Hertz, daughter of [Heinrich Hertz], who has some Jewish ancestry and who cannot now live in Germany. As a zoologist 'of standing', Rutherford encloses a letter from Professor [Augustus Daniel] Imms saying he will allow her to work in 'the laboratory' [the Entomological Department of the ...

  4. HERTZ, MATHILDE CARMEN (b. Bonn, Germany, 14 January 1891; d. Cambridge, United Kingdom, 20 November 1975), Gestalt psychology, comparative psychology, sensory physiology. Hertz was a pioneering comparative psychologist.

  5. the German sensory physiologist and comparative psychologist Mathilde Hertz (1891-1975) have remained relatively obscure until recently. Her research represented a combination of

  6. When Mathilde Carmen Hertz was born on 14 January 1891, in Bonn, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, her father, Heinrich Rudolf Hertz, was 33 and her mother, Elisabetha Amalie Katharina Doll, was 26. She lived in Chesterton, Cambridgeshire, England, United Kingdom in 1939.

  7. Hertz is famous for proving the existence of electromagnetic waves, thus paving the way for wireless communication. The fre-quency unit ‘hertz’ was named after him. His daughter, Mathilde Carmen, was born in Bonn on January 14, 1891. She was just under three years of age when her father died at only 36.