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  1. Charles Gordon Gross (February 29, 1936 – April 13, 2019) was an American professor of psychology and a neuroscientist who studied the sensory processing and pattern recognition in the cerebral cortex of macaque monkeys. He spent 43 years of his career at Princeton University.

  2. Charles (Charlie) Gordon Gross, professor of psychology and the Princeton Neuroscience Institute, emeritus, who revolutionized the understanding of sensory processing and pattern recognition, died April 13 in Oakland, California. He was 83. Gross was one of the founders of the field of cognitive neuroscience.

  3. Download (PPT) We guarantee that you’ve never met anyone quite like Charlie Gross, an iconoclast and pioneer who blazed a trail through the uncharted territories of the cerebral cortex. Charles Gordon Gross was unconventional from the moment he was born on a leap day, February 29, 1936, to Communist parents (a “red-diaper baby”).

  4. Esto y más es lo que sabemos hoy en día de la corteza, pero ¿Cómo fue el descubrimiento de susfunciones? Es eso lo que describe este artículo de Charles Gross quien era un profesor de psicología y del instituto de neurociencias de Princeton. Fritsch y Hitzig:

  5. Charles Gordon Gross, Professor of Psychology and the Princeton Neuroscience Institute, emeritus, died Saturday, April 13, 2019, in Oakland, California. He was 83. Gross retired from Princeton University in 2013 after forty-three years on the faculty. With his pioneering research on the primate visual system, he revolutionized our understanding ...

  6. Author. Charles G Gross 1. Affiliation. 1 Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08540, USA. cggross@princeton.edu. PMID: 17620195. DOI: 10.1080/09647040600630160. Abstract. In 1870 Gustav Fritsch and Edvard Hitzig showed that electrical stimulation of the cerebral cortex of a dog produced movements.

  7. Charles G. Gross, a neuroscientist specializing in vision and the functions of the cerebral cortex, is Professor of Psychology at Princeton University. He is the author of Brain, Vision, Memory: Tales in the History of Neuroscience (MIT Press, 1998).