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Kimberly G. Noble is an American neuroscientist and pediatrician known for her work in socioeconomic disparities and children's cognitive development.
Lumpkin's lab studies the somatosensory pathways that encode various stimuli like touch, vibration, and texture. Her research is on the skin's sensory neurons pick up tactile features of objects and how skin cells communicate with the neuro system to encode touch.
Howard Tucker (born July 10, 1922) is an American neurologist who has been practicing medicine since 1947. In addition to becoming a lawyer and passing the Ohio Bar Examination at age 67 in 1989, Tucker is recognized by Guinness World Records as the current oldest practicing doctor.
List of women neuroscientists. Elizabeth Roboz Einstein (1904–1995), pioneering biochemist and neuroscientist from Hungary. The following is a list of female neuroscientists by nationality – notable women who are well known for their work in the field of neuroscience .
A former youth worker the newspaper wrote about in 2021, Nathaniel Lumpkins, pleaded guilty last month to breaking a 15-year-old boy’s arm out of anger at one of the Department of Juvenile ...
Enrico Fazzini is an American neurologist. He is considered an expert on Parkinson's disease and has published numerous research publications on the subject. He has been involved in a number of clinical trials for new pharmaceutical treatments for Parkinson's disease.
A former worker at a Kentucky juvenile detention facility pleaded guilty in connection with breaking a 15-year-old boy’s arm. Nathaniel Lumpkins pleaded guilty to a federal charge of violating...
Neuropsychiatry. Neuropsychiatry is a branch of medicine that deals with psychiatry as it relates to neurology, in an effort to understand and attribute behavior to the interaction of neurobiology and social psychology factors. [1]
Henry William Woltman (16 June 1889 – 1 November 1964) [1] was an American neurologist and the first neurologist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. [2] Moersch-Woltman syndrome and Woltman sign are named for him. [2] [3] Upon his death, he was survived by his wife and four children.
In June 2019, the university opened a $560 million, 625,000 square-foot biomedical research building on the Chicago campus. The new building, the Louis A. Simpson and Kimberly K. Querrey Biomedical Research Center, is connected to the existing Robert H. Lurie Medical Research Center.