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Search results 221 - 230 of 344 matching essays
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221: The History of Medicine
... study the movements of the hear, lungs, and muscles. More radical changes were being made in the 19th Century than had been in the last thousand years. In these years, Nobel Prizes were being won from studies of the nervous systems to cellular democracy. Things came about that most people don't even think about because they are so common. Many ...
222: The History of Medicine
... study the movements of the hear, lungs, and muscles. More radical changes were being made in the 19th Century than had been in the last thousand years. In these years, Nobel Prizes were being won from studies of the nervous systems to cellular democracy. Things came about that most people don't even think about because they are so common. Many ...
223: Hepatitis A
... technique was used successfully to determine certain other viral types. Blumberg is a physician and biochemist who discovered the Hepatitis B antigen and who is a corecipient of the 1976 Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine for his part in "discoveries concerning new mechanisms for the origin and dissemination of infectious diseases." After studying hepatitis worldwide, Blumberg isolated the antigen in ...
224: Your Brain
... the loss of speech. Damage to the right side, however did not. Doctors speculated over what this meant. Was the brain schizophrenically divided and non-communicative? In the early 1960s, Nobel Prize winner Dr. Roger Sperry proved that patients who had their corpus callosum severed to try and control epileptic seizures could no longer communicate between their hemispheres. The struggle can ...
225: Two Brains?
... the loss of speech. Damage to the right side, however did not. Doctors speculated over what this meant. Was the brain schizophrenically divided and non-communicative? In the early 1960s, Nobel Prize winner Dr. Roger Sperry proved that patients who had their corpus callosum severed to try and control epileptic seizures could no longer communicate between their hemispheres. The struggle can ...
226: The Future of Human Evolution
... offspring " (Lewin 1). DNA discovery is attributed to the research of three scientists, Francis Crick, Maurice Wilkins, and James Dewey Watson in 1951. They were all later accredited with the Nobel Price in physiology and medicine in 1962 (Lewin 1). "The new science of genetic engineering aims to take a dramatic short cut in the slow process of evolution" (Stableford 25 ...
227: Is More Than One Cause of AIDS Possible?
... the president of the Helicon Foundation in San Diego and secretary of the Group for the Scientific Reappraisal of the HIV/AIDS Hypothesis; Kary B. Mullis, who won the 1993 Nobel Prize in chemistry for inventing the “polymerase chain reaction” technique for detecting DNA, which is used to search for fragments of HIV in AIDS patients; and Phillip E. Johnson, who ...
228: Two Sides of The Brain
... the loss of speech. Damage to the right side, however did not. Doctors speculated over what this meant. Was the brain schizophrenically divided and non-communicative? In the early 1960s, Nobel Prize winner Dr. Roger Sperry proved that patients who had their corpus callosum severed to try and control epileptic seizures could no longer communicate between their hemispheres. The struggle can ...
229: Tumours
... using an injection of tumour filtrate. The sarcoma virus was the first tumour virus identified, and it opened up a whole new area of cancer research. Rous shared the 1966 Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine for his work.
230: Theodore Roosevelt's Impact On The Presidency
... the balance of power in Asia. He accepted to the Open Door Policy and secured a promise from Russia to vacate Manchuria. Roosevelt’s role as a mediator won the Nobel Peace Prize. Roosevelt called presidency "a bully pulpit" meaning that it gave him a wonderful stage from which to win support from the public for a change. Roosevelt managed to ...


Search results 221 - 230 of 344 matching essays
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