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  1. Ivan Mikhaylovich Sechenov (Russian: Ива́н Миха́йлович Се́ченов; August 13 [O.S. August 1] 1829 – November 15 [O.S. November 2] 1905) was a Russian psychologist, physiologist, and medical scientist.

  2. Ivan Mikhailovich Sechenov (1829–1905), Russian physiologist, neurologist, and founder of objective physiological psychology, was born the son of a small landowner in the village of Tyoply Stan (now Sechenovo) in Simbirsk Province (now Arzamas Region).

  3. Aug 26, 2014 · Born on August 13, 1829, in a small village near Simbirsk on the Volga, Ivan Michailovich Sechenov played a prominent role in the development of physiology in his home country—Pavlov considered him “the father of Russian physiology”—and his many contributions have had sustained impact worldwide.

  4. This article reviews the contributions of Ivan Michailovich Sechenov [1829–1905] to the neurophysiological concept of central inhibition. He first studied this concept in the frog and on himself. Later his trainees extended the study of central inhibition to other mammalian species.

  5. Sechenov, son of a nobleman and a peasant, was born in the village of Teplyi Stan, now the village of Sechenovo,Gorky Oblast, on 1 August 1929. He graduated from the Main Engineering School in St Petersburg in 1848 and the medical faculty of Moscow University in 1856.

  6. …three scholars—the 19th-century Russian physiologist Ivan Mikhailovich Sechenov; the American founder of behaviourism, John B. Watson; and Piaget—independently arrived at the conclusion that the activities that serve as elements of thinking are internalized or “fractional” versions of motor responses.

  7. Contribution of the outstanding russian physiologist Ivan Mikhailovich Sechenov to establishment and development of neurophysiology and psychophysiology is considered. Analysis is presented of I.M. Sechenov’s fundamental discoveries that laid foundation of the modern neurophysiology.