Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. 28 de feb. de 2013 · 28 Febrero 2013. Sergio Parra. 10666 publicaciones de Sergio Parra. Peter Miler y James Olds, de la Univesidad McGill, Canadá, experimentaban con una rata en otoño de 1953. Le habían implantado unos electrodos en su cerebro para estudiar una estructura llamada sistema reticular del cerebro medio.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Peter_MilnerPeter Milner - Wikipedia

    Peter Milner (13 June 1919 – 2 June 2018) was a British-Canadian neuroscientist. Biography. Milner was born in Silkstone Common and grew up in Barnsley, South Yorkshire, England. His father was David William Milner, a research chemist, and his mother was Edith Anne Marshall, an ex-schoolteacher.

  3. 6 de jun. de 2018 · Peter M. Milner was a British-born electrical engineer who co-discovered electrical self-stimulation of the brain with James Olds in 1954. He later taught and researched neuroscience at McGill University and received the Gold Medal for Distinguished Lifetime contributions to Canadian Psychology.

  4. 24 de ene. de 2020 · En 1954, James Olds y Peter Milner (Olds & Milner, 1954) hicieron un experimento que causó un gran impacto en la comunidad científica (Olds & Milner, 1954). Implantaron un electrodo en el núcleo accumbens de una rata. La función de ese electrodo era estimular eléctricamente el núcleo accumbens, produciendo una descarga de dopamina.

  5. En la década de 1950, James Olds y Peter Milner implantaron electrodos en los cerebros de roedores pequeños y permitieron que los animales presionasen una palanca para recibir una leve ráfaga de estimulación eléctrica en sus cerebros.

  6. El centro del placer. Durante los años cincuenta, los psicólogos canadienses James Olds y Peter Milner, de la Universidad McGill, descubrieron que las ratas se acostumbraban a tocar una palanca...

  7. Just over fifty years ago, psychologists James Olds and Peter Milner, working at McGill University in Canada, carried out their pioneering experiments which discovered that rats would repeatedly press levers to receive tiny jolts of current injected through electrodes implanted deep within their brains ( Olds and Milner, 1954 ).