Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Patricia Goldman-Rakic (/ r ə ˈ k iː ʃ / rə-KEESH; née Shoer, April 22, 1937 – July 31, 2003) was an American professor of neuroscience, neurology, psychiatry and psychology at Yale University School of Medicine. She pioneered multidisciplinary research of the prefrontal cortex and working memory.

  2. Patricia Goldman-Rakic (22 de abril de 1937 - 31 de julho de 2003) foi uma neurocientista norte-americana reconhecida por seu estudo pioneiro do funcionamento do lobo frontal e da memória de trabalho. Antes de seus estudos o funcionamento de atividades cognitivas superiores era considerado inacessível para uma análise ...

  3. 24 de nov. de 2003 · When Patricia Goldman-Rakic died on July 31 at the age of 66, she was at the zenith of her career as a world-renowned neuroscientist, whose ground breaking discoveries about the frontal...

    • George Aghajanian, Benjamin S Bunney, Philip S Holzman
    • 2003
  4. 1 de ago. de 2003 · Patricia Goldman-Rakic was a preeminent Yale neuroscientist who made groundbreaking discoveries in working memory and the frontal lobe. She also studied the role of dopamine and signaling molecules in brain disorders and cognitive deficits.

    • 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, 06520, CT
  5. 7 de jul. de 2023 · Patricia Goldman-Rakic (1937–2003), the co-founder of this journal, was a pioneering neuroscientist who made transformational discoveries about the prefrontal cortex and the neurobiological basis of working memory. Her research served as the foundation for cognitive neuroscience, and paved the path for women in science.

  6. 29 de jan. de 2024 · In her influential review of the cellular basis of working memory (Goldman-Rakic, 1995), which currently (December 2023) has over 3,000 citations, Pat hypothesized that pyramidal cells with similar “best spatial locations” are interconnected in deep layer III, much like the primary visual cortex neurons with similar orientation ...

  7. Patricia Shoer Goldman-Rakic made the groundbreaking discovery of how newly evolved, neuronal circuits in the primate prefrontal association cortex (PFC) are able to generate the mental representations that are the foun-dation of abstract thought, a process that culminates in the human brain.