When we come to the still higher evolution of the cerebrum, we can easily understand that, if the same plan be carried out, a square inch of convolution may be wanting, without palsy of the face, arm, and leg, as x, y, and z are represented in other convolutions... On the Localisation of Movements in the Brain - Strana xviautor/autoři: John Hughlings Jackson - 1873 - 37 str.Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| Leonard W. Sedgwick,Edited By - 1870 - 358 str.
...but that each unit contains x, y, and z—some, let us say, as x s , y z , z, others as # a , y 3 , z, &c. When we come to the still higher evolution...face, arm, and leg, as x, y, and z are represented in * It is not to be implied that all fibres run direct from the brain to the muscles. No doubt there... | |
| William Wotherspoon Ireland - 1886 - 406 str.
...that each unit contains ..•, y, and z — some, let us say, as xv y.,, z; others as xv y^ z, &o. When we come to the still higher evolution of the...y, and z, are represented in other convolutions." Bearing these qualifications in mind, one arrives at a notion of an area where the impressions of sight... | |
| William Wotherspoon Ireland - 1893 - 418 str.
...others y largely only, as y3, but that each unit contains x, y, and z — some, let us say, as x3, ya z; others as x2, y3, z, &c. When we come to the still...y, and z, are represented in other convolutions." Bearing these qualifications in mind, one arrives at a notion of an area where the impressions of sight... | |
| Edwin Clarke, Charles Donald O'Malley - 1996 - 1078 str.
...y,, but that each unit contains x,y, and z — some, let us say, asx?, y2, z, others asx2 yv z, etc. When we come to the still higher evolution of the...convolution must put in excessive movement the whole region, for it contains processes representing x, y, and z, with grey matter in exact proportion to the degree... | |
| |