Evgeni Babsky

Evgeni Babsky (Russian: Бабский, Евгений Борисович; 19021973) was a Soviet physiologist, D.Sc., Member of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences.[1]

Evgeni Babsky
Born
DiedSeptember 10, 1973(1973-09-10) (aged 71)
Alma materMoscow State University (1924)

Biography

Evgeni Babsky was graduated from Moscow State University in 1924. During the period of 1932—1949 he works as professor at Moscow State V. I. Lenin Pedagogical Institute. In the 1950s he became head of the Laboratory of Clinical Physiology in the Institute of Physiology of the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences. He had contributed much to the study of mediators and the physiology of the heart, and developed a number of physiological methods of studying the human organism. Evgeni Babsky had published over 300 scientific works, including a number of monographs. His textbooks were reprinted many times in Russian and translated into other languages.

Evgeni Babsky died at the age of 71 on September 10, 1973, in Moscow.

Works

  • Babsky, Evgeni; Boris Khodorov; Grigory Kositsky; Anatoly Zubkov (1989). Evgeni Babsky (ed.). Human Physiology, in 2 vols. Translated by Ludmila Aksenova. Translation edited by H. C. Creighton (M.A., Oxon). Moscow: Mir Publishers. ISBN 5-03-000776-8  First published in Russian as «Физиология человека»
gollark: So, say, OLEDs, capacitative touchscreens (okay, I'm not sure how old those are), much faster RAM and new RAM technologies, laptops which you can actually carry, and transistors at the scale of tens of nanometres are not "new technologies"?
gollark: Laptops now are very different to ye olden laptops, touchscreens... are generally better now, I guess, LCDs can go to crazy resolutions and refresh rates and are being replaced by OLEDs in some areas, "microprocessors" is so broad and ignores the huge amount of advancement there.
gollark: I mean, yes, we have those still, but they're very broad categories.
gollark: What "20-30 year old technology"?
gollark: M.2 is just a form factor, M.2 SSDs can use SATA or NVMe, NVMe is a newer PCIe-based protocol for SSDs which is faster but not really that significant for everyday use, you can use your existing SSD if your thing supports it.

References

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