Max Rothmann

Max Rothmann ( born April 26, 1868 in Berlin, † August 12, 1915 ) was a German neurologist.

Life

Max Rothmann studied in Berlin and Freiburg and received his doctorate 1889. From 1891 to 1893 he was an assistant in the Berlin Urban Hospital, since 1896, a Department of internal and nervous diseases. In 1899 he habilitated at the Friedrich- Wilhelms- University, where he was appointed in 1910 for internal medicine and neurology associate professor.

In Roth 's initiative, the Prussian Academy of Sciences funded from 1914 to Tenerife a Anthropoidenstation, in the Wolfgang Köhler conducted his famous studies on the use of tools and the problem solving behavior of chimpanzees to 1920.

In August 1915 Max Roth man committed suicide. His grave is located in the Jewish Cemetery Beautifully Allee in Prenzlauer Berg district of Berlin's Pankow district.

Works

  • About membranous enteritis. In: German Medizinische Wochenschrift, 1893, p 999
  • The primary combinierten strand diseases of the spinal cord ( combinirte system diseases). In: German Journal of Neurology, Volume 7, 1895, pp. 171-262, doi: 10.1007/BF01652032
  • About the trunk muscle Centrum in Fühlspäre the cerebral cortex, in " Journal of Neurology Central. Genre achievements in the areas of anatomy, physiology, pathology and treatment of the nervous system, including mental illness. " Hg Emanuel Mendel. Vol 15, H. 24, Veit & Compagnon, Leipzig 1896, pp. 1105-1116
  • About the pyramidal decussation. In: Archives of Psychiatry and Nervous Diseases, Volume 33, No. 1, 1900, pp. 292-310, doi: 10.1007/BF02322136
  • About the results of experimental elimination of motor function and its importance for the pathology. Journal of Medical Psychology, Vol 48 August Hirschwald, Berlin 1903, pp. 10 - 29 with 2 lithographed plates
  • About new theories of hemiplegic movement disorder in Albert Wangerin, eds: Proceedings of the Society of German Natural Scientists and Physicians - 76th meeting at Cologne. 18 -24. Sept. 1904 Second Part, II half. Medicinische divisions. F. C. W. Vogel, Leipzig 1905
  • The dog without the cerebrum. In: German Journal of Neurology, Volume 38, 1910, pp. 267-269; also in negotiations society German neurologists. 3rd Annual Meeting, Vienna, 17 to 19 September 1909. Vogel, Leipzig 1910
  • For localization in the cerebellar cortex. in " Journal of Neurology Central ... ". Vol 29, H. 7, ibid 1910
  • The brain physiology in the service of the war. After a held in the Berlin Physiological Society on January 8, 1915 lecture. In: Berliner Klinische Wochenschrift, Vol 52, 1915, p 338
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