Jerre Levy

Jerre Levy (born April 7, 1938) is an American psychologist and researcher of the brain. She has studied the relationship between the cerebral hemispheres and visual-oriented versus language-oriented tasks in split-brain surgery patients.[1]

Jerre Levy was born in Birmingham, Alabama on April 7, 1938. She earned a degree in psychology from the University of Miami in 1962. She attended graduate school there for a year and a half before transferring to Caltech, where she worked in Roger Sperry's laboratory. She received her PhD in 1970. From 1972 to 1977 Levy taught at the University of Pennsylvania. She then became a professor at the University of Chicago.[1]

She has also found evidence that the left hemisphere specializes in linear reasoning, while the right brain is more involved in holistic reasoning.

She claims that the two hemispheres of the brain work together for every human function rather than act as two separate brains, as Sperry believed.

Publications

gollark: It might become obsolete if a RXGT+ 2130 (I fully expect the naming scheme of the next generation to be this bad) is made, which presumably will be somewhat cheaper than my card and perform similarly.
gollark: My GTX 1050 is arguably still not obsolete since there is no similarly priced newer competitor from Nvidia.
gollark: You should complain to redidit.
gollark: The best ÇPU for this? Probably an LN2-cooled overclocked 28 core Xeoñ W.
gollark: Oh, and 8x 8K mönitors.

References

  1. Yount, Lisa (2007). "Levy, Jerre". A to Z of Women in Science and Math (Rev. ed.). New York: Infobase Pub. pp. 175–176. ISBN 978-1-4381-0795-0.

Further reading

  • Durden-Smith, Jo; deSimone, Diane (January 1985). "Interview: Jerre Levy". Omni. 7 (4): 69–70, 98–102.
  • Goldberg, Joan Rachel (July 1984). "The Creative Mind: Jerre Levy". Science Digest: 47, 90, 92.
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