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pro vyhledávání: '"Paul E. Neumann"'
Publikováno v:
Clinical Anatomy. 36:641-650
Publikováno v:
World Neurosurgery. 159:120-125
The eponymous term torcular Herophili has been used for the confluence of sinuses. Although no original writings of Herophilus are extant, his accomplishments and descriptions live on in the writings of such authors as Galen. However, in regard to th
Autor:
Eve E. Neumann, Paul E. Neumann
Publikováno v:
Clinical Anatomy. 34:794-801
The modern view that the human body is composed of tissues and body fluids, and that there are four basic tissue types, may be a more significant departure from Artistotle's homoeomeres, and from Bichat's membranes and tissues, than commonly apprecia
Autor:
Paul E. Neumann
Publikováno v:
Clinical Anatomy. 34:507-511
Most of the terms in Terminologia Anatomica are arranged by organ systems (systemata); however, the names for these systems are often used by physiologists and other biomedical scientists for related functional systems. These functional systems may d
Autor:
Paul E. Neumann
Publikováno v:
Clinical Anatomy. 34:187-190
Introduction Communication in the biomedical sciences and clinical practice would be clearer if everyone used the same set of technical terms. Technical vocabularies, such as international standard terminologies, are attempts to avoid common linguist
Publikováno v:
Clinical Anatomy. 33:327-331
Revision of the international standard anatomical terminology is required periodically to add names for new entities, delete archaic terms, and correct errors in existing terms. In addition to a small set of nomenclature rules, three principles have
Autor:
Paul E. Neumann, Thomas R. Gest
Publikováno v:
Clinical Anatomy. 33:187-191
Textbooks frequently report that there are 206 human bones, or 200 bones and 6 auditory ossicles. The human bone counts in history and within adulthood were reviewed. Tallies of 197 to 307 bones have been reported over the past several centuries. The
Autor:
Paul E. Neumann
Publikováno v:
Clinical Anatomy. 31:1100-1103
The frequency of diminutives in anatomical Latin has often been noted to be high, but that is not unusual in postclassical Latin. Although the connotation of "little" is well known, many of the diminutives in anatomical Latin do not have that meaning
Autor:
Paul E. Neumann
Publikováno v:
Clinical anatomy (New York, N.Y.)REFERENCES. 34(2)
The rules of the anatomical nomenclature are sometimes in conflict with the principles of revision of the nomenclature. This is possibly most obvious is the debate about the use of the Latin words pudendus ("shameful") and sacer ("holy") in the anato
Autor:
Paul E. Neumann
Publikováno v:
Clinical Anatomy. 33:22-24
Future revisions of anatomical terminologies will have to give more consideration to the relationships between terms and referents, and the relationships between referents, because computer applications require greater precision. Median anatomical en