Walter Hess AKA Walter Rudolf Hess Born: 17-Mar-1881 Birthplace: Frauenfeld, Switzerland Died: 12-Aug-1973 Location of death: Locarno, Switzerland Cause of death: Natural Causes
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Occupation: Scientist, Doctor Nationality: Switzerland Executive summary: Brain mapping, neurophysiological methods Walter Hess established a thriving practice as an ophthalmologist, then gave it up, returned to medical school, and became a physiologist. His primary area of research was blood circulation and the respiratory system, but his most famous work involved mapping the brain. Experimenting on living cats and dogs that had tiny needles piercing their skulls, he was able to ascertain which parts of the brain control various functions and internal organs. With pressure on a cat's brain, he could trigger a panicked response in the animal, even control its heartbeat and breathing. Hess and Portuguese neurosurgeon Egas Moniz shared the 1949 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Father: (physicist)
Medical School: MD, University of Zurich (1906) Scholar: University of Bonn (1912-17) Professor: Physiology, University of Zurich (1917-51) Administrator: University of Zurich (1917-51)
Nobel Prize for Medicine 1949, with Egas Moniz
Author of books:
The Biological Aspect of Psychology (1962) The Biology of Mind (1964)
Do you know something we don't?
Submit a correction or make a comment about this profile
Copyright ©2019 Soylent Communications
|