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  1. Alexandra Adler (24 September 1901 – 4 January 2001) was an Austrian neurologist and the daughter of psychoanalyst Alfred Adler and Raissa Adler. She has been described as one of the "leading systematizers and interpreters" of Adlerian psychology. [1] Her sister was socialist activist Valentine Adler. [2]

  2. 31 de out. de 2023 · A ese kilo y medio de que llamamos cerebro, que contiene 86 000 millones de neuronas, dedicó su vida la neurocientífica austriaca Alexandra Adler, que vivió un siglo para darnos a conocer muchos de los misterios que ocultaba, relacionados con el daño cerebral, la esquizofrenia o el estrés postraumático. Alexandra Adler.

  3. Alexandra Adler. Related Content: Resources. Alexandra Adler was born in Vienna, Austria on September 24, 1901, the second of four children born to Alfred Adler–the founder of individual psychology–and his Russian wife, Raissa Timofeyevna Epstein, who was a daughter of a Jewish merchant.

  4. Alexandra Adler (24 de septiembre de 1901, Viena - 4 de enero de 2001, Nueva York (EE. UU.) [1] fue una neuróloga austriaca que realizó importantes aportaciones al estudio del estrés postraumático. Hija del psicoanalista Alfred Adler, contribuyó a sistematizar sus aportaciones.

  5. As one of the first women to practice neurology Alder directed the Neurological Department for Women. In 2001, Alexandra Adler passed away in the New York University hospital. Her contributions to the fields of psychology, psychiatry, psychotherapy and neurology have been profound.

  6. 21 de out. de 2022 · Alexandra Adler was one of the first women neurologists at Harvard Medical School. Much of her biographical information derives from an editorial in The Harvard Gazette, dated 18 January 2001 [ 1 ], and from an article by the clinical psychologist Hendrika Vande Kemp [ 2 ].

  7. 18 de jan. de 2001 · January 18, 2001 2 min read. Alexandra Adler. Alexandra Adler, authority on schizophrenia, pioneer in the study of post-traumatic stress disorder, and one of the first women neurologists at Harvard, died in New York City on Jan. 4. She was 99.