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         Pavlov Ivan Petrovich:     more books (69)
  1. Ivan Pavlov: Exploring the Animal Machine (Oxford Portraits in Science) by Daniel Todes, 2000-06-22
  2. Ivan P. Pavlov: Toward a scientific psychology and psychiatry (Pavlov and Freud) by Harry Kohlsaat Wells, 1956
  3. Pavlov's Physiology Factory: Experiment, Interpretation, Laboratory Enterprise by Daniel P. Todes, 2001-11-20
  4. Ivan Pavlov, the man and his theories (Profiles in science) by Hilaire Cuny, 1966
  5. I.P. Pavlov, his life and work by Ezras Asratovich Asratian, 1953
  6. Pavlov: A Biography by Boris Petrovich Babkin, 1949-06
  7. Temperament-Personality-Activity by Jan Strelau, 1983-12
  8. Zum Erziehungsziel des sozialistischen Bildungswesens der DDR, Rationalitat versus Determination: E. Beitr. zur Analyse u. Kritik materialist. Psychologie u. Padagogik (German Edition) by Hildegard Lingmann, 1978
  9. Kontroverse um Pawlow: Arbeitsseminar am 24.-25.1.1981 in Frankfurt (mit Bibliographie) (German Edition)
  10. Essays on the patho-physiology of the higher nervous activity: According to I.P.Pavlov and his school by A. G Ivanov-Smolenskiĭ, 1954
  11. Pavlov (Modern Masters) by Jeffrey A. Gray, 1979-09-13
  12. Advances in Understanding Brain Behavior in Animals: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Evelyn B. Kelly, 2000
  13. Recent work of Pawlow and his pupils: Conditioned reflexes, sypmathetic nervous system (Orbeli), epilepsy and cerebrospinal fluid (Speransky) by W. Horsley Gantt, 1927
  14. Reinforcement, positive and negative: An entry from UXL's <i>UXL Encyclopedia of Science</i>

61. PsiRo: Biografii
ivan petrovich pavlov. Chiar si in primele stadii ale cercetarii, munca lui pavlova fost Academiei de Stiinte Ruse, in 1904 i sa acordat premiul nobel, in 1907
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Ivan Petrovich Pavlov
S-a nascut in 14 septembrie 1849 la Ryazan, unde tatal sau, Peter Dmitrievich Pavlov, era preotul satului. La inceput a fost educat la scoala bisericii si apoi la seminarul teologic de acolo. Inspirat de ideile progresiste raspindite de D.I. Pisarev, cel mai eminent critic literar rus al perioadei si de I.M. Sechenov, parintele fiziologiei ruse, Pavlov a abandonat cariera religioasa si si-a dedicat viata stiintei. In 1870 s-a inscris la Facultatea de Fizica si Matematica pentru a urma cursul de stiinte naturale. Pavlov a fost foarte pasionat de fiziologie care a avut o importanta fundamentala in toata viata lui. In timpul primului curs, in colaborare cu un alt student, Afanasyev, el a realizat primul sau tratat, o lucrare referitoare la fiziologia nervilor pancreatici. Lucrarea a fost larg apreciata, acordindu-i-se o medalie de aur. In 1890, a fost invitat sa organizeze si sa conduca Departamentul de Fiziologie al Institutului de Medicina Experimentala. Sub conducerea lui, care a continuat pina la sfirsitul vietii, Institutul a devenit unul dintre cele mai importante centre de cercetare fiziologica.

62. Nobel Prices Related To Neuroscience
nobel prices related to neuroscience. 1904 ivan petrovich pavlov (Russia) in recognitionof his work on the physiology of digestion, through which knowledge on
http://www.biomag.helsinki.fi/braincourse/nobelneuroscience.html
To BioMag home page
Nobel prices related to neuroscience
1973 Physics: Brian David Josephson (Great Britain) "for his theoretical predictions of theproperties of a supercurrent through a barrier, in particular those phenomena which are generally known as the Josephson effects" 1991 Erwin Neher (Germany) Bert Sakmann (Germany) "for their discoveries concerning the function of single ion channels in cells" Alfred G. Gilman (USA) Martin Rodbell (USA) "for their discovery of G-proteins and the role of these proteins in signal transduction in cells" Send comments to Risto Ilmoniemi ( rji@biomag.helsinki.fi
BioMag Laboratory, Helsinki University Central Hospital
P.O. Box 340, FIN-00029 HUS, Finland
FAX +358-9-47175781, Tel. +358-9-47172096, +358-50-5562964
http://www.biomag.helsinki.fi

63. Psychological Science On The Net!!! Psychology Topics/Learning -
ivan petrovich pavlov Winner of the 1904 nobel Prize in Medicine ivan petrovichpavlov, a nobel Prize Laureate in Physiology and Medicine, at the nobel Prize
http://www.psychologicalscience.net/pages/Psychology_Topics/Learning_-_Behavior/

64. Ivan Petrovich Pavlov
ivan petrovich pavlov was a professor at the military medical pavlov was a skillfulambidextrous surgeon who used glands he received the 1904 nobel Prize in
http://www.coe.unco.edu/DonnaFerguson/ETHistory/PAVLOV.HTM
Ivan Petrovich Pavlov
Classical Conditioning Ivan Petrovich Pavlov In psychology, Pavlov, who became famous for his discovery of the conditioned reflex, did experiments with the salivation of dogs. Pavlov referred to the unconditioned stimulus as the meat powder used to make the dogs salivate. A bell or some other sensory stimuli was labeled the conditioned stimulus. The bell was sounded about one half second before the meat powder was presented to the dog. After repeated trials, the dog would salivate whenever the bell sounded, even if no meat powder accompanied the bell. Pavlov labeled this response as a conditioned response. Termination of the condition could occur if the conditioned stimulus continued repeatedly without the unconditioned stimulus. Pavlov termed this as extinction. Pavlov discovered in this experiment that the conditioned response would totally recover after a few repeated trials. Pavlov termed this spontaneous recovery. Pavlov's fame stems from his use of animals as subjects in the field of psychology.

65. Premio Nobel De Medicina - Wikipedia
Translate this page Ramón y Cajal 1905 Robert Koch 1904 ivan petrovich pavlov 1903 Niels Ryberg Finsen1902 Ronald Ross 1901 Emil Adolf von Behring. See also Premio nobel,
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premio_Nobel/Medicina
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Premio Nobel de Medicina
(Redirigido desde Premio Nobel/Medicina Ver enlace: http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/index.html
Leland H. Hartwell R. Timothy Hunt Paul M. Nurse ... Harold E. Varmus Sir James W. Black Gertrude B. Elion George H. Hitchings Susumu Tonegawa ... Barbara McClintock for transposon work. Sune K. Bergström Bengt I. Samuelsson John R. Vane Roger W. Sperry ... Earl W. Sutherland, Jr. Sir Bernard Katz Ulf von Euler Julius Axelrod Max Delbrück ... Feodor Lynen Sir John Carew Eccles Alan Lloyd Hodgkin Andrew Fielding Huxley Francis Harry Compton Crick ... Georg von Békésy Sir Frank Macfarlane Burnet Peter Brian Medawar Severo Ochoa Arthur Kornberg ... Dickinson W. Richards

66. Mikhail Nesterov. Biography. - Olga's Gallery
pavlov, ivan petrovich (18491939) Russian scientist, physiologist, born into thefamily of a village nobel prize winner in 1904 for physiology and medicine .
http://www.abcgallery.com/N/nesterov/nesterovbio.html
Olga's Gallery
Mikhail Nesterov
Mikhail Vasilyevich Nesterov was born into the family of a merchant on May 1862 in the city of Ufa in the Urals, Russia. In 1874, his parents brought him to Moscow to study in a technical college, where he caught the attention of K. Trutovsky, an artist and inspector of the Moscow School of Art. This was an important meeting, the turning point in his life. In 1876 on the recommendation of K. Trutovsky he entered the Moscow School of Painting and Sculpture; he studied in the classes of Perov Savrasov and Pryanishnikov. In 1881, he entered St. Petersburg Academy of Art, studio of professor Pavel Tchistyakov (1881-84), actively participated in the Itinerants’ Society of Traveling Exhibitions (the society organized the traveling exhibitions through all Russia).
First he tried himself in the genres of historic and everyday scenes, but later, in the 1890s, he became interested in religious themes. In technique his religious pictures are much influenced by style modern. In the 1890s-1900s, he fulfilled paintings in the Vladimir Cathedral in Kiev, mosaics in the Cathedral of the Resurrection of Christ in St. Petersburg (1894-96), paintings in the Church of Alexander Nevsky in Abastuman, Georgia (1899-1904), frescoes in Marfo-Mariinsky Cloister in Moscow (1907-11). His other works of the period are also connected with religion: Hermit Vision to Youth Bartholomew Youth of Saint Sergey Radonezhsky Tzarevich Dmitry ... Archbishop (Portrait of Antoniy Volynskiy) (1917) and many others.

67. Psychological Images In Publication--P
pavlov, ivan petrovich, Handwritten letter to Herbert S. Langfeld Pavolv, petrovichKimble, Wertheimer, White Penzias, Arno (nobel prize winner) Psychology
http://www.apa.org/archives/psyimagep.html
Psychological Images in PublicationP
Archives of the American Psychological Association
Pachman, Joseph S.
American Psychologist, 51(3), 1996, 214 Pacht, Asher R.
American Psychologist, 1983, 38, 31 Packwood, Sen. Robert
American Psychologist, 1983, 38, 1243 Padilla, Amado M.
Contemporary Psychology, 1993, 38, 346 Pain reaction, 500-watt bulb, Robert B. Malmo's study
Psychology Today, March 1970, p. 83 Pain, "Trigger Zones," illustrations showing where pain is located, from Ronald Melzack's article
Psychology Today, October 1970, p. 65 Pain, illustrations of "Surgery for Pain," from Ronald Melzack's article
Psychology Today, October 1970, p. 67 Pain-induced aggression in animals: snake, opossum, turtle, ferret, rat, raccoon, pigeon. 14 photos
Psychology Today, 1967, 1(1), 28-33 Paley, Vivian Gussin Contemporary Psychology, 1986, 31, 252 Pallak, Michael S. American Psychologist, 1981, 36, 1473 Palmer, Caroline American Psychologist 1997 #52 328. Palmer, Edward L. American Psychologist, 1975, 30, 67 Pappenheim, Bertha ("Anna O")

68. A Science Odyssey: People And Discoveries: Ivan Pavlov
ivan pavlov was born in a small village in central Russia. pavlov was held in extremelyhigh regard in his country In 1904, he won the nobel Prize in physiology
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank/entries/bhpavl.html
Ivan Pavlov
Ivan Pavlov was born in a small village in central Russia. His family hoped that he would become a priest, and he went to a theological seminary. After reading Charles Darwin, he found that he cared more for scientific pursuits and left the seminary for the University of St. Petersburg. There he studied chemistry and physiology, and he received his doctorate in 1879. He continued his studies and began doing his own research in topics that interested him most: digestion and blood circulation. His work became well known, and he was appointed professor of physiology at the Imperial Medical Academy. Pavlov was much more interested in physiology than psychology. He looked upon the young science of psychiatry a little dubiously. But he did think that conditioned reflexes could explain the behavior of psychotic people. For example, he suggested, those who withdrew from the world may associate all stimulus with possible injury or threat. His ideas played a large role in the behaviorist theory of psychology, introduced by John Watson around 1913.

69. Pavlov, Ivan Petrovich (1849-1936) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific
pavlov, ivan petrovich (18491936), Russian physiologist. He received the Nobelprize in medicine and physiology in 1904. Author Eric W. Weisstein. logo, logo.
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/Pavlov.html
Branch of Science Physiologists Branch of Science Psychologists ... Medicine and Physiology Prize
Pavlov, Ivan Petrovich (1849-1936)

Russian physiologist. He received the Nobel prize in medicine and physiology in 1904.
Author: Eric W. Weisstein

70. Ivan Petrovich Pavlov:
Translate this page ivan petrovich pavlov. Fisiologista russo laureado com o prémio Nobele célebre pelas suas investigações no campo dos reflexos do corpo.
http://www.citi.pt/educacao_final/trab_final_inteligencia_artificial/ivan_petrov

Index
História da
Inteligência Artificial
Inteligência Artificial ... Bibliografia
IVAN PETROVICH PAVLOV
Voltar
IVAN PETROVICH PAVLOV Voltar

71. DR. IVAN PAVLOV (1849-1936)
ivan pavlov (18491936 Born in Russia, pavlov was educated to enter priesthood butelected investigations of digestive glands he was awarded the nobel prize in
http://www.uic.edu/depts/mcne/founders/page0072.html
DR. IVAN PAVLOV
Born in Russia, Pavlov was educated to enter priesthood but elected to be a scientist. After earlier studies in Russia, he went to Germany for graduate work. His numerous contributions are in 4 major fields, cardiac physiology, digestion, central nervous system and psychophysiology. In his investigations of digestive glands he was awarded the Nobel prize in 1904. He developed the famous "Pavlov pouch". Also, he began to study psychology and he applied his physiological studies to this field. His book on reflexes is monumental. He was recognized as a great scientist by Russia even though he disagreed with Communism. He will be remembered as one of the great physiologists of all time. Return to the index
This page last updated on 2/7/2000.

72. Ivan Petrovich Pavlov
Translate this page pavlov, ivan petrovich (1849-1936). édecin russe et physiologiste, lauréat du prixNobel de médecine ou physiologie (1904), célèbre pour ses études sur le
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Agora/1768/portrait/p_pavlov.htm
Pavlov, Ivan Petrovich voir Comportement animal; Expérimentale, psychologie). Ses principaux écrits sont (1922) et le Réflexe conditionné Source (Texte) : Encyclopédie Microsoft Encarta® 98

73. Newsletter Of The UNBSJ Psychology Society, Issue 1 - 99/00
By the way (for those of you who slept through that particular class), ivan Petrovichpavlov was born In 1904, pavlov's studies won him the nobel Prize in
http://www.unbsj.ca/clubs/psych/issue19900.html
The UNBSJ Psych Society Newsletter
Issue 1, 99/00
Recap of Events:
This month:
Train your Brain Day! October 13th
Want to know the truth behind the "humans use only 10% of their brains" myth? Go to Jay's Brain , a weekly column sponsored by Discovery Channel. Want to give your brain some exercise? Check out the plethora of fun and challenging tests at QueenDom.Com ! Just want to learn more about Psychology (cause that's fun to), go to Pinar Dilber's Links and pick the topic of your choice! Also, check out this novel page on the brain, FEED: My Favorite Lobe . Lastly, think you're REAL smart? Check out all the High I.Q. Societies out there and see if you have what it takes! Oh, and you can send a virtual card celebrating this special day at Blue Mountain Arts under Wacky Holidays!
Happy 150th Birthday Ivan Petrovich Pavlov!
On September 24, the UNBSJ Psychology Society kicked off its second year of existence by celebrating Ivan Pavlov's birthday at our frist general meeting. The party was made possible thanks to Dr. H. Taukulis, who had the initial idea and then coordinated the event (thank you!). Thanks also to the Millidgeville Market for their donation of an enormous cake (mmm... icing). Over twenty staff and students attended the event, including most of the Psychology department as well as history professor Dr. Donnelly. The Psychology Society was more than pleased to add to its numbers, so thank you to all the students who filled out membership forms. Remember, you don't have to be a Psychology student to join the Society!

74. Ivan Pavlov
the first Russian and physiologist to receive the nobel Prize, which ivan PetrovichPavlov can be thanked for maintaining the purity of observational science
http://www.a2zpsychology.com/great psychologists/Ivan pavlov.htm
Ivan P. Pavlov "Essentially, only one thing in life is of real interest to us - our psychical experience. Its mechanism, however, was and still is shrouded in profound obscurity." I. P. Pavlov Ivan Pavlov was a Russian scientist most famous for describing the psychological phenomenon referred to as a "conditioned response". Pavlov made a number of other very important discoveries in the realm of physiology, particularly related to digestion. Indeed, it was while studying the secretion of digestive enzymes that he became interested in the integration of the body and the brain. Born to a Russian minister on September 14, 1849, Pavlov grew up in the town of Ryazan. Due to a childhood accident, Ivan was unable to attend school as early as other children, but did get started at age 11. After finishing school he was sent to theological seminary to follow in his father’s footsteps, but dropped out in 1870 to enroll at the University of St. Petersburg. It was there that Pavlov became interested in and started his career in physiology. His first research project, under the tutelage of Elie Cyon, involved investigation of pancreatic nerves, and this work earned him gold medal honors at the university. Pavlov continued his studies at the Military Medical Academy between the years of 1875 and 1879. He finished his dissertation and earned the degree of doctor of medicine in 1883. Pavlov gained the influence of prominent researchers such as Ludwig, Heidenhain, and Bofkin during the next several years, and was named Professor of Pharmacology at St. Petersburg Institute of Experimental Medicine in 1895. Soon after this honor he became Professor of Physiology, and held that position until 1924.

75. European Psychologist
To the Memory of ivan petrovich pavlov (18491936 of this Thematic Issue devoted toivan P. pavlov Following a brief synopsis of pavlov's life, an extract from
http://www.hhpub.com/journals/ep/1997/abstv2i2.html
European Psychologist
Published in cooperation with EFPPA and supported by other organizations of psychology in Europe
June 1997, Volume 2, No. 2
Original Articles and Reviews:
To the Memory of Ivan Petrovich Pavlov
by Kurt Pawlik, University of Hamburg, Germany This editorial preface introduces the historical context and explains the editorial preparation of this Thematic Issue devoted to Ivan P. Pavlov and his research on classical conditioning. Following a brief synopsis of Pavlov's life, an extract from his 1904 Nobel Laureate address is reprinted to highlight Pavlov's thinking, in his own words, about the nature of the psychological phenomena that formed the focus of research in the second half of his life.
Pavlov's Theory and Russian Psychology
by Tatyana N. Ushakova, Institute of Psychology, RAS, Moscow, Russia The main Pavlovian ideas about connections betwen physiology and psychology are sketched here, with particular emphasis placed on the principle of their interrelations suggested by I.P. Pavlov. Some examples are given where physiological and psychological phenomena were described in coordination with each other. The schools and approaches in Russian psychology exploring Pavlov's ideas are also presented: the research of Teplov, Nebylitsyn, Boiko, Sokolov, Livanov, and Lebedev is briefly reviewed. Some points of criticism of Pavlov's theory are analyzed.
The "Pavlovian" Session of the Two Academies
by Andrei Brushlinsky

76. YKHOANET - SKDS - DN - IVAN PETROVICH - NGUYEN LAN HUNG SON
h?c thuy?t ph?n x? có di?u ki?n , nhà bác h?c Nga ivan PetrovichPavlov dã vinh d? du?c nh?n gi?i thu?ng nobel v? sinh lý
http://www.ykhoa.net/SKDS/DANHNHAN/74-11.html
KỶ NIỆM 150 NẮM NG€Y SINH CỦA IVAN PETROVICH PAVLOV (1849-1999) PAVLOV NH€ SINH HỌC BẬC NHẦT THẾ GIỚI NGUYỄN LẤN H™NG SÆ N (Theo World Famous People Trong hÆ¡n 60 năm hoạt động khoa học, Pavlov đ£ c³ những ph¡t hiện qu½ b¡u về sinh l½ học v  y học. ”ng l  người ph¡t triển trường ph¡i sinh l½ học tổng hợp. Th´ng qua học thuyết về phản xạ c³ điều kiện v  hệ thống t­n hiệu thứ hai, tức ng´n ngữ, Pavlov đ£ chứng minh rằng ½ thức con người được h¬nh th nh trªn cÆ¡ sở vật chất. Mặc d¹ l  một nh  khoa học "đến tận xÆ°Æ¡ng tủy" - nhÆ° ´ng thường n³i - Pavlov kh´ng tá»± giới hạn m¬nh trong bốn bức tường của ph²ng th­ nghiệm. ”ng t­ch cá»±c tham gia nhiều hoạt động x£ hội. Trong nhiều năm, ´ng tận t¢m l m nhiệm vụ Chủ tịch Hội thầy thuốc Nga, ´ng c²n phụ tr¡ch Hội sinh l½ học v  cả tờ tập san của hội nữa. Th¡ng 8/1935, tại cung Tavrich©v ở Leningrad đ£ khai mạc Hội nghị quốc tế c¡c nh  sinh l½ học lần thứ XV, c³ đại biểu 52 nước tới dá»±, Pavlov được xem l  nh  khoa học vÄ© đại nhất thế giới trªn lÄ©nh vá»±c sinh l½ học.

77. Discovery Online, Wayback Machine -- Russia, 1899
famous scientists in history, Dr. ivan petrovich pavlov discoverer of a tome byRussian physiologist ivan Sechenov in the late 1880s, pavlov began exploring
http://www.discovery.com/stories/wayback/wayback.html
by Patrick J. Kiger
"Uh-uh, buddy," Browser snarls at me. "NO WAY am I going in there."

I am surprised at this uncharacteristic display of truculence from my canine companion, since he, after all, invariably is the one who leads the way in sniffing out moments of historical significance during our time travels. But as we stand among the grand columns and elegant spires of St. Petersburg, Russia on a winter morning in 1899, Browser is clearly agitated about what may lie ahead. We have found our way to the doorstep of the Institute of Experimental Medicine, about to enter the laboratory of one of the most famous scientists in history, Dr. Ivan Petrovich Pavlov discoverer of the conditioned response and father of the field of behavioral psychology. Browser is not impressed. He is more focused on Pavlov's reputation as a man who used dogs as his lab rats.
One of Pavlov's assistants keys a close eye on his instrument recording reflex action. "Look, you go in there and have him stick a tube in your snout and ring bells and flash lights to get you to drool. Not my idea of fun." "But Browser," I point out. "this is science. And I know how you

78. The Nobel Prize
Winners of the nobel Prize in Medicine 1901 Emil A. von Behring (18541917 1904Ivan petrovich pavlov (1849-1936) Russian In recognition of his work on the
http://www.tallpoppies.net.au/florey/explorer/nobel/main-content.html
History of the Prize
The Nobel Prize
Alfred Nobel was a Swedish chemist. He invented dynamite and became very rich. He gave more than 9 million dollars of his fortune to set up the Nobel prizes. Each year money from this fund goes to those who have most helped humanity. The Nobel Committee gives prizes for important work in physics, chemistry, medicine, literature, peace, and economics. Prize winners receive a cash prize (currently $1 million), a gold medal (above) and a certificate (below).
Winners of the Nobel Prize in Medicine
1901 Emil A. von Behring (1854-1917) German
For his work on serum therapy, especially its application against diphtheria, by which he has opened a new road in the domain of medical science and thereby placed in the hands of the physician a victorious weapon against illness and death.
1902 Sir Ronald Ross (1857-1932) British
For his work on malaria, by which he has shown how it enters the organism and thereby has laid the foundation for successful research on this disease and how to combat it.
1903 Niels Ryberg Finsen (1860-1904) Danish
In recognition of his contribution to the treatment of diseases, especially

79. Pavlov
ivan petrovich pavlov 1849 1936 ivan pavlov was born in a small village in centralRussia. pavlov was held in extremely high regard in his country both as
http://www.ittheory.com/pavlov.htm
Ivan Petrovich Pavlov
Russian physiologist
  • Famous for 1902 study of the salivary responses of dogs. A device measured the amount of saliva secreted by dog before the food was actually presented - this is called a conditioned reflex and the stimulus, in this case, the food dish, is called a conditioned stimulus . Conditioned reflex is called the conditioned response today. Ivan Pavlov was born in a small village in central Russia. His family hoped that he would become a priest, and he went to a theological seminary. After reading Charles Darwin, he found that he cared more for scientific pursuits and left the seminary for the University of St. Petersburg. There he studied chemistry and physiology, and he received his doctorate in 1879. He continued his studies and began doing his own research in topics that interested him most: digestion and blood circulation. His work became well known, and he was appointed professor of physiology at the Imperial Medical Academy. Pavlov was much more interested in physiology than psychology. He looked upon the young science of psychiatry a little dubiously. But he did think that conditioned reflexes could explain the behavior of psychotic people. For example, he suggested, those who withdrew from the world may associate all stimulus with possible injury or threat. His ideas played a large role in the behaviorist theory of psychology, introduced by John Watson around 1913. Pavlov was held in extremely high regard in his country both as Russia and the Soviet Union and around the world. In 1904, he won the Nobel Prize in physiology/medicine for his research on digestion. He was outspoken and often at odds with the Soviet government later in his life, but his world renown, and work that his nation was proud of, kept him free from persectuion. He worked actively in the lab until his death at age 87.

80. Ìåìîðèàëüíûé ìóçåé-êâàðòèðà È.Ï.Ïàâëîâà
ivan petrovich pavlov, the great Russian physiologist was born in From 1875 to 1879ivan pavlov continued his the physiology of digestion IP.pavlov was awarded
http://www.museum.infran.ru/eng/pavlov/pavlov.htm
The St. Petersburg University
In 1875 Ivan Pavlov graduated the University with the degree of a candidate of science and a golden medal for being "successful" in his scientific work named "About Nerves, commanding the functioning of the pancreas".
From 1875 to 1879 Ivan Pavlov continued his studies in the Medical Surgical Academy (which from 1881 will be renamed as Military Medical Academy) as he wrote: "...not with the aim of becoming a doctor, but so as to have the right of acquiring the chair of the professor at the Department of Physiology" (from the "Autobiography" of I. P. Pavlov).
The Military Medical Academy
In 1883 he wrote his Thesis for a Doctor's degree "Centrifugal Nerves of the heart" and in 1884 he was elected by the Conference of the Military Medical Academy as assistant professor (senior lecturer) at the Department of Physiology.
I.P.Pavlov. 1884.
For more than 10 following years (1878 - 1889) he informally directed the scientific work in the experimental laboratory of the S.P.Botkin Clinic of Military Medical Academy, aimed at the research of the physiology cardiovascular system.
The experimental laboratory
In 1890 he was elected as Professor of the Department of Pharmacology and in 1895 - of the Department of Physiology of the Medical Military Academy.

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