Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 115
pro vyhledávání: '"Marco Piccolino"'
Learn the complete Qt ecosystem and its tools and build UIs for mobile and desktop applicationsKey FeaturesUnleash the power of the latest Qt 5.9 with C++14Easily compile, run, and debug your applications from the powerful Qt Creator IDEBuild multi-p
Autor:
Marco Piccolino, Nicholas J. Wade
Galileo is known as a pioneer of science - especially of mechanics and astronomy - but far less attention has been paid to his work on the senses generally, and more specifically on vision. In this book, two experts on the history of science look at
Autor:
Marco Piccolino, Marco Bresadola
'... and still we could never suppose that fortune were to be so friendly to us, such as to allow us to be perhaps the first in handling, as it were, the electricity concealed in nerves, in extracting it from nerves, and, in some way, in putting it u
Autor:
Marco Piccolino
This chapter is dedicated to Giuseppe Levi, an outstanding personality of the Novecento intelligentsia. It focuses on Levi’s dynamic attitude in the biological investigation and the fertile and lively science of Italian society in the post-Risorgim
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::b803fb6d5d486699eb7f4307fbf3ef34
https://doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190907587.003.0018
https://doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190907587.003.0018
Autor:
Cecilia Panti, Marco Piccolino
Dante's Visions: Crossing Sights on Natural Philosophy, Theory of Vision, and Medicine in the Divine Comedy and Beyond offers a fascinating insight into Dante's engagement with the science of his time, particularly with visual perception and neurolog
Autor:
Marco Piccolino
Publikováno v:
Brain and Art ISBN: 9783030235796
This chapter explores the possibility that the phrase “temps perdu,” present in the title of the masterpiece of Marcel Proust, may have a scientific origin. Exactly the same expression was indeed used in 1851, more than 50 years before Proust, by
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::12af0876ce9d71bb67b9376aedca7b21
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-23580-2_11
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-23580-2_11
Publikováno v:
Journal of the history of the neurosciences. 28(4)
In 1866, Holmgren published an account of the physiological action of light on the retina. The article is taken as the origin of research on the electroretinogram, although the term was not introduced until much later. We present a translation of the
Autor:
Marco Piccolino, Nicholas J. Wade
Publikováno v:
Journal of the History of the Neurosciences. 22:79-95
Myths are not uncommon in the history of neuroscience and their tenacity even when faced with suitable correctives is impressive. The possible origins and transmission of one such myth is examined: the oft repeated quotation, attributed to Luigi Galv
Publikováno v:
Brain Research Reviews. 66:256-269
Giuseppe Moruzzi was born one century ago; he was an outstanding Italian neurophysiologist, who was particularly famous for his contributions to the study of the mechanisms underlying the control of the sleep-waking cycle in mammals. In 1990, Rita Le
Publikováno v:
Journal of the History of Biology. 42:715-763
During the mid-18th century, when electricity was coming into its own, natural philosophers began to entertain the possibility that electricity is the mysterious nerve force. Their attention was first drawn to several species of strongly electric fis