124,376 research outputs found

    Postcard to Peter V. Karpovich from Ivan Pavlov

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    Postcard from Dr. Ivan Pavlov to Dr. Peter V. Karpovich.For more information on Peter V. Karpovich, see: https://springfield.as.atlas-sys.com/agents/people/571 During Dr. Peter V. Karpovich's time as a medical student at the Medical Military Academy in Petrograd (1914-1919) he was taught by the internationally renowned physiologist Dr. Ivan P. Pavlov. They remained in contact, and attended the 13th International Physiology Conference at Harvard Medical School together in April of 1929.This postcard can be found on the 16th page of the scrapbook. Translation and Russian transcription provided by Marianna Asatiani

    Ivan Petrovich Pavlov, painting by Dr. Peter V. Karpovich, 1935

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    This is a painting of Ivan Petrovich Pavlov by Dr. Peter V. Karpovich.For more information on Peter V. Karpovich, see: https://springfield.as.atlas-sys.com/agents/people/571 Pavlov was a Russian physiologist known primarily for his classical conditioning. He enrolled in the physics and mathematics faculty at the University of Saint Petersburg in 1870 to take the course in natural science. He won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1904. He is most famous for the "conditioned reflex" in which he examined the rates of salivation among dogs. He learned that dogs would salivate when food was presented and a metronome sound was made. The dog later came to associate the metronome sound with the presentation of food.Painting has been damaged since digitization. Cardboard painted on bent and has cracked surface

    Ivan Petrovich Pavlov

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    The article is coincided with the anniversary – 80 years after appellation of the nameof I. P. Pavlov to the First Saint Petersburg State Medical University. The paper describes the scientific path of the first Nobel laureate of Russia. The article highlighted the most important achievements in the field of physiology. The article highlighted the pedagogicalactivity of I. P. Pavlov, named his outstanding disciples and followers

    Связность некоторых поверхностей, вложенных в проективное пространство с аффинорной структурой

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    [Vishnevsky V. V.; Vishnevskii V. V.; Вишневский В. В.]; [Pavlov E. V.; Pavlov Evstati; Pavlov Evstaty; Павлов Евстати]Bulgarian. Russian, English summar

    Pavlov Winery - rough substructure

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    Tato bakalářská práce se zabývá technologickou etapou hrubé spodní stavby vinařství v Pavlově. Obsahem práce je technická zpráva stavebně technologického projektu, návrh zařízení staveniště, strojní sestava, širší vztahy dopravních tras a technologický předpis pro zemní práce. Dále je v práci obsažen časový harmonogram a položkový rozpočet.This bachelor thesis is about technological stage of the rough substructure design of winery in village Pavlov. Content of this thesis includes engineering report of technological project, construction site equipment used machinery, transport routes and technological regulations for groundwork. This thesis also contains construction time schledule and itemized budget.

    Ivan Pavlov and his Russian pupils, 1929

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    A newspaper clipping showing Dr. Peter V. Karpovich, standing on left, with six fellow students of Dr. Ivan Pavlov. Dr. Pavlov is seated in the center of his students with his hands resting on his cane. The photograph was taken at the 13th International Congress of Physiologists, held in Boston in April, 1929. The photo was part of an article that Dr. Karpovich wrote. The article is not included.The XIIIth Congress of Physiologists, the first to be held outside of Europe, took place in Boston, MA, in 1929. It was a watershed meeting and indicated that American physiology had come of age.Meticulously organized, it was the largest congress to date, with over 1,200 participants from more than 40 countries.This article is on the 78th page of the scrapbook. It is the first item on this page to be digitized

    Book Review of "The Russian Cosmists: The Esoteric Futurism of Nikolai Fedorov and His Followers"

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    Pavlov, Evgeni V.. (2013). Book Review of "The Russian Cosmists: The Esoteric Futurism of Nikolai Fedorov and His Followers". Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/186955

    Ivan Pavlov driving

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    This photograph shows Dr. Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936) sitting in a car holding the steering wheel as another man looks in through the open door. The picture is part of the Peter V. Karpovich Papers in an unbound scrapbook.Pavlov was a Russian physiologist known primarily for his classical conditioning. He enrolled in the physics and mathematics faculty at the University of Saint Petersburg in 1870 to take the course in natural science. He won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1904. He is most famous for the "conditioned reflex," in which he examined the rates of salivation among dogs. He learned that dogs would salivate when food was presented and a metronome sound was made. The dog later came to associate the metronome sound with the presentation of food. The image is not dated, but may have been taken sometime in the 1920s or early thirties

    In memory of Ivan P. Pavlov

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    Ivan P. Pavlov was the first Russian Nobel Prize winner, a great scientist, the pride of the national science community and ‘the first physiologist of the world’, as described by his colleagues at an international congress. 22 February 2016 marks 80 years since the death of the Russian scientist, physiologist Ivan Pavlov
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