These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
201 related articles for article (PubMed ID: 24290271)
41. Engineers have more sons, nurses have more daughters: an evolutionary psychological extension of Baron-Cohen's extreme male brain theory of autism. Kanazawa S; Vandermassen G J Theor Biol; 2005 Apr; 233(4):589-99. PubMed ID: 15748918 [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
42. Languages of the heart: the biomedical and the metaphorical in American fiction. Oldfield BJ; Jones DS Perspect Biol Med; 2014; 57(3):424-42. PubMed ID: 25959354 [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
43. S. Weir Mitchell, M.D. (1829--1914). Neurologic and psychiatric observations in "The case of George Dedlow". Schneck JM N Y State J Med; 1979 Oct; 79(11):1777-82. PubMed ID: 386182 [No Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]
45. The strange case of Silas W. Mitchell: writing and injury in the Gilded Age. Soller M Trans Stud Coll Physicians Phila; 2002 Dec; 24():71-2. PubMed ID: 12800319 [No Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]
46. [The theory of the mind of the autistic child]. Poirier N Sante Ment Que; 1998; 23(1):115-29. PubMed ID: 9775957 [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
47. Weir Mitchell's 1859 demonstration of "a peculiar contraction" produced by a percussion hammer. Louis ED Neurology; 2008 Mar; 70(12):969-73. PubMed ID: 18347320 [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
48. S. Weir Mitchell's visual hallucinations as a grief reaction. Schneck JM Am J Psychiatry; 1989 Mar; 146(3):409. PubMed ID: 2645798 [No Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]
49. Metaphorical dimensions of childhood autism. Albury WR Occas Pap Med Hist Aust; 1993; 6():311-9. PubMed ID: 11619368 [No Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]
50. S. Weir Mitchell, Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The yellow wallpaper," and Capgras' syndrome. Schneck JM N Y State J Med; 1991 Oct; 91(10):445-9. PubMed ID: 1745450 [No Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]
51. 'On mind-blindness (optic agnosia)', a classical clinico-pathological report, and its author Wilhelm von Stauffenberg (1879-1918). Danek A J Hist Neurosci; 1996 Aug; 5(2):126-35. PubMed ID: 11619040 [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
52. William Alexander Hammond: the centenary of his death. Freemon FR J Hist Neurosci; 2001 Dec; 10(3):293-9. PubMed ID: 11770195 [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
53. Charles Dickens: the man, medicine, and movement disorders. Schoffer KL; O'Sullivan JD J Clin Neurosci; 2006 Nov; 13(9):898-901. PubMed ID: 17015015 [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
54. The correspondence between Winkler and Monakow during World War I. Koehler PJ; Jagella C Eur Neurol; 2015; 73(1-2):66-70. PubMed ID: 25402843 [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
55. Autism and art. James I Front Neurol Neurosci; 2010; 27():168-173. PubMed ID: 20375530 [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
57. The experimentation of S. Weir Mitchell with mescal. Metzer WS Neurology; 1989 Feb; 39(2 Pt 1):303-4. PubMed ID: 2644583 [No Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]
58. S. Weir Mitchell's early fictional description of multiple personality. Schneck JM Am J Psychiatry; 1989 Feb; 146(2):284. PubMed ID: 2643364 [No Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]
59. Mitchell's case of "pendulum spasms": psychogenic movement disorder considered as male hysteria. Lanska DJ Neurology; 2015 Jan; 84(4):424-9. PubMed ID: 25628430 [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
60. Cerebral localization in the nineteenth century--the birth of a science and its modern consequences. Steinberg DA J Hist Neurosci; 2009 Jul; 18(3):254-61. PubMed ID: 20183205 [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related] [Previous] [Next] [New Search]