Joseph Bogen
#23,001
Most Influential Person Now
American physician
Why Is Joseph Bogen Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Joseph E. Bogen, M.D. was a neurophysiologist who specialized in split brain research and focused on theories of consciousness. He was a clinical professor of neurosurgery at the University of Southern California, Adjunct Professor of Psychology at UCLA, and a visiting professor at Caltech.
Joseph Bogen's Published Works
Published Works
- The other side of the brain. II. An appositional mind. (1969) (583)
- Interhemispheric relationships: the neocortical commissures; syndromes of hemisphere disconnection (1969) (555)
- Observations on visual perception after disconnexion of the cerebral hemispheres in man. (1965) (369)
- Some functional effects of sectioning the cerebral commissures in man* (1962) (333)
- WERNICKE'S REGION–WHERE IS IT? (1976) (247)
- Dyspraxia following division of the cerebral commissures. (1967) (212)
- Are Unilateral Right Posterior Cerebral Lesions Sufficient to Cause Prosopagnosia? Clinical and Radiological Findings in Six Additional Patients (1986) (210)
- The other side of the brain. IV. The A-P ratio. (1972) (207)
- Cerebral Commissurotomy in Man (1965) (206)
- The other side of the brain. 3. The corpus callosum and creativity. (1969) (177)
- Hemispheric lateralization of singing after intracarotid sodium amylobarbitone1 (1974) (176)
- Absence of deconnexion syndrome in two patients with partial section of the neocommissures. (1971) (167)
- Cerebral commissurotomy. A second case report. (1965) (153)
- Alexithymia in twelve commissurotomized patients. (1977) (137)
- On the Neurophysiology of Consciousness: 1. An Overview (1995) (119)
- Musical Tests for Functional Lateralization with Intracarotid Amobarbital (1971) (108)
- Laterality effects in somesthesis following cerebral commissurotomy in man (1963) (99)
- Alexithymia: an experimental study of cerebral commissurotomy patients and normal control subjects. (1986) (91)
- Disorganization and reorganization of cognitive and sensorimotor functions in cerebral commissurotomy. Compensatory roles of the forebrain commissures and cerebral hemispheres in man. (1981) (85)
- On the Neurophysiology of Consciousness: Part II. Constraining the Semantic Problem (1995) (74)
- Completeness of callosotomy shown by magnetic resonance imaging in the long term. (1988) (67)
- On the neurophysiology of consciousness: I. An overview. (1995) (65)
- The other side of the brain. I. Dysgraphia and dyscopia following cerebral commissurotomy. (1969) (56)
- Creativity and the corpus callosum. (1988) (53)
- Some neurophysiologic aspects of consciousness. (1997) (46)
- FURTHER DISCUSSION ON SPLIT-BRAINS AND HEMISPHERIC CAPABILITIES (1977) (41)
- Alexithymia and the split brain. V. EEG alpha-band interhemispheric coherence analysis. (1987) (36)
- Alexithymia and the split brain. III. Global-level content analysis of fantasy and symbolization. (1985) (34)
- Educational Aspects of Hemispheric Specialization. (1975) (34)
- Does Cognition in the Disconnected Right Hemisphere Require Right Hemisphere Possession of Language? (1997) (33)
- Alexithymia and the split brain. I. Lexical-level content analysis. (1985) (33)
- Different psychological status in the two hemispheres of two split-brain patients. (1998) (31)
- Local complications in 167 patients with indwelling venous catheters. (1961) (30)
- Alexithymia and the split brain: VI. Electroencephalographic correlates of alexithymia. (1988) (28)
- The dual brain: Some historical and methodological aspects. (1985) (26)
- Cultural hemisphericity: evidence from cognitive tests. (1979) (23)
- Recovery of Foreleg Placing after Ipsilateral Frontal Lobectomy in the Hemicerebrectomized Cat (1962) (23)
- Alexithymia and the split brain. IV. Gottschalk-Gleser content analysis, an overview. (1985) (23)
- Split-brain basics: relevance for the concept of one's other mind. (2000) (22)
- Alexithymia and the split brain. II. Sentential-level content analysis. (1985) (22)
- The clinging position of the bulbocapninized cat. (1961) (21)
- Dr. TenHouten and Associates Reply (1986) (18)
- Linguistic Performance in the Short-Term Following Cerebral Commissurotomy (1976) (17)
- Quantitative analysis of cortical pyramidal neurons after corpus callosotomy (2003) (16)
- A case report of pathological rule-governed syllable intrusion (1983) (15)
- Perception of Dichotic Chords by Normal and Commisurotomized Human Subjects (1977) (15)
- Testing the Commissurotomy Patient (1990) (14)
- TREATMENT OF GENERALIZED SEIZURES BY CEREBRAL COMMISSUROTOMY. (1963) (13)
- Paw contact placing in the hypothalamic cat given caffeine. (1975) (12)
- Hemispheric specialization and cerebral duality (1983) (10)
- Regional Differences in Propagation of Spreading Cortical Depression in the Rabbit.∗ (1956) (10)
- THE GRASP REFLEX of the FOOT and RELATED PHENOMENA IN the ABSENCE of OTHER REFLEX ABNORMALITIES FOLLOWING CEREBRAL COMMISSUROTOMY (1976) (9)
- Face modules, face network: the cognitive architecture of the brain revealed through studies of face processing. (2001) (8)
- Mental duality in the intact brain. (1986) (6)
- Mental numerosity: Is one head better than two? (1981) (5)
- The Cambridge Handbook of Consciousness: The Thalamic Intralaminar Nuclei and the Property of Consciousness (2007) (5)
- A Half-Century of Perpetuating Netter's Anatomic Error (2006) (5)
- My Developing Understanding of Roger Wolcott Sperry’s Philosophy (1998) (5)
- Some Historical Aspects of Callosotomy for Epilepsy (1995) (4)
- Alexithymia and the Split Brain: VII. (1988) (4)
- Descartes' fundamental mistake: Introspective singularity (1994) (3)
- The experience of will: Affective or cognitive? (2004) (3)
- RESUSCITATION FROM NONSURGICAL SUDDEN APPARENT DEATH DUE TO CORONARY OCCLUSION * (1960) (2)
- Transcallosal approach to third ventricle tumor: case report. Partial removal of an infundibuloma (grade I astrocytoma arising from the floor of the third ventricle). (1977) (2)
- An example of access-consciousness without phenomenal consciousness? (1997) (2)
- A giant walk-through brain. (1972) (2)
- on Ned Block ( 1995 ) . On a confusion about a function of consciousness (1998) (2)
- More on the question of cultural hemisphericity. (1976) (1)
- Commissurotomy Patients and Normal Control Subjects (1986) (1)
- Dysfunction From Defacilitation (1975) (1)
- An Experimental Disconnection Approach to a Function of Consciousness (2001) (1)
- IS TPO HEMINEGLECT THE RESULT OF UNBALANCED INHIBITION? (2004) (1)
- Cerebral Hemispheric Specialization for Specialists. (1975) (1)
- Cerebral commissurotomy in man: EEG findings. (1969) (1)
- Groundbreaking work that began more than a quarter of a century ago has led to ongoing insights about brain organization and consciousness (1999) (1)
- Callosotomy without disconnection? (1994) (1)
- GLISSANDO ELECTRONARCOSIS. SOME SEMANTIC CONFUSIONS IN PSYCHIATRIC ELECTROTHERAPY. (1963) (0)
- Proposed standards for testimony by neurosurgeons acting as expert witness. (1988) (0)
- Second Thoughts and Secondary Corrections. (1980) (0)
- Musical performance during anoxia (1980) (0)
- Letter: Modification of aneurysm clip applier. (1974) (0)
- Roger Wolcott Sperry (20 August 1913-17 April 1994). (1999) (0)
- Corpus Callosum Prefrontal Cortex Thalamus Cerebellum Septum (2002) (0)
- Perception of dichotic chords by split‐brain subjects (1976) (0)
- Mild closed head injury and seizures. (1992) (0)
- Wigan's observations on cerebral duality (1986) (0)
- Synopsis of the Chronic Human Split-Brain Syndrome (2004) (0)
- Address to the 11th European Conference on Psychosomatic Research (1977) (0)
- A Preconceptioned Perspective on a Plethora of Papyrologic Philosophers (2000) (0)
- Some student concepts of functional disease. (1956) (0)
- Letter: Dysfunction from defacilitation. (1975) (0)
- Perception of dichotic chords by hemispherectomized subjects (1976) (0)
- A shorter paper (1981) (0)
This paper list is powered by the following services:
Other Resources About Joseph Bogen
What Schools Are Affiliated With Joseph Bogen?
Joseph Bogen is affiliated with the following schools: