The incredible case of Phineas Gage has now been translated into Spanish.
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THE daguerreotype on the right is believed to be the only known image of railroad worker Phineas Gage, who was enshrined in the history of neuroscience one day in September, 1848, when a large iron rod he was using to tamp gunpowder into a hole in a rock caused an explosion and was propelled…
Four representations of Phineas Gage, from Macmillan, M. (2006). Restoring Phineas Gage: A 150th Retrospective. J. Hist. Neurosci. 9: 46-66. [Abstract]
Here's some more neurohistory from the Beeb: following on from last week's episode of In Our Time, which featured a discussion about the…
My post about overturned neuroscientific dogmas has been translated into Polish by Jedrzej Kaminski, the author of a blog called Neurotyk.
This isn't the first time that something I've written has been translated into another language. Last year, my post about Phineas Gage was translated into…
My post on the ethnobiology of voodoo zombification has just been translated into Greek.
As far as I know, this is the second time something I've written has been translated into another language. (There's also an Italian translation of my post on Phineas Gage.)