Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 7 de may. de 2024 · Leo Kanner (born June 13, 1894, Klekotow, Austria—died April 3, 1981, Sykesville, Maryland, U.S.) was an Austrian American psychiatrist referred to as the “father of child psychiatry” in the United States. He is considered to be one of the most influential American clinical psychiatrists of the 20th century.

  2. 22 de may. de 2024 · Soukhareva describió casos de autismo de Asperger, mientras que Frankl, colaborador de Hans Asperger y Leo Kanner, desempeñó un papel crucial en la difusión de las ideas sobre el autismo....

  3. Hace 5 días · Perhaps most notably, the continued development of a solid biological explanation for autism helps dispel early notions, propagated most prominently by psychiatrist Leo Kanner in the 1940s, that autism was a result of toxic parenting, not a biological difference, and that autism was a very narrow category applying only to individuals ...

  4. Hace 3 días · In the 1930s and 1940s, Hans Asperger and Leo Kanner described two related syndromes, later termed infantile autism and Asperger syndrome. Kanner thought that the condition he had described might be distinct from schizophrenia, and in the following decades, research into what would become known as autism accelerated.

  5. 13 de may. de 2024 · The term “early infantile autism” was coined by Leo Kanner, a psychiatrist at John Hopkins University, in 1943. His study of 11 children, who at the time would have been diagnosed as developmentally disabled or schizophrenic, was the first to suggest autism as a unique condition.

  6. Hace 5 días · Another point is that Leo Kanner's study of 11 children from 1943, in which he claimed to have identified 'a unique "syndrome", not heretofore reported', characterised by an 'extreme autistic aloneness', gained a far greater importance in English-language medicine than Asperger's study (8).

  7. 17 de may. de 2024 · However, in 1943 Austrian-born American psychiatrist Leo Kanner recognized autism as a disorder distinct from schizophrenia and gave autism its modern description. In subsequent decades, several autism-like disorders also were identified, resulting in the group of conditions known as autism spectrum disorders, or ASDs.

  1. Otras búsquedas realizadas