Lectures on localization in diseases of the brain, delivered at the Faculté de médecine, Paris, 1875 . Bediirf-niss der Arzte. Brunswick, 1869. There is an English translation of the work. Upon this subject, read in the last edition of Darwins The Descent ofMan (London, 1874), Professor Huxleys interesting note (p. tgg), on the resem-blances and differences in the structure and development of the brain in man andapes. LOCALIZATION IN CEREBRAL DISEASES. Drain. This study possesses additional interest from the factthat actual experiment has already located upon some of theconvolutions of the m


Lectures on localization in diseases of the brain, delivered at the Faculté de médecine, Paris, 1875 . Bediirf-niss der Arzte. Brunswick, 1869. There is an English translation of the work. Upon this subject, read in the last edition of Darwins The Descent ofMan (London, 1874), Professor Huxleys interesting note (p. tgg), on the resem-blances and differences in the structure and development of the brain in man andapes. LOCALIZATION IN CEREBRAL DISEASES. Drain. This study possesses additional interest from the factthat actual experiment has already located upon some of theconvolutions of the monkey brain those points known 3s,psycho-motor, thus furnishing a base for clinical and anatomico-patho-logical research concerning their existence in correspondingpoints of the human brain. Here is a lateral representation of a monkeys brain (Fig. 2) /[St. front, conjv. .Ascending parietal conv.\ >Fissure of Rolando :i^otor-cenleps fov rotaU ^J ?Motor; cenlersTor^niovementsofface. IMotor centers of fore-legs?• the ascend. a par. Conv.„. centers or certain movements, viskm. icm^^, Mfllor-centers fortiearing &movements f^ Fig. 2.—External face of the brain of the magot monkey (Pithecus Innuus).—Broca and Gromier. taken from the work of Gromier. It is a brain of the magot(^Pithecus innuus), a monkey of somewhat low type. I willgive a description of the external face of the hemisphere only,the internal and inferior faces being of less importance to oursubject. First, two long fissures are seen, the fissure of Rolandoand that of Sylvius. These fissures converge and constitutethe posterior border of the external face of the frontal lobe. Further back is seen another fissure, the the monkey this fissure very clearly separates the occipitallobe from the temporal and parietal lobes. This separationis much less marked in the hum


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookpublishern, booksubjectbrain