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Jason W. Brown | |
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Born | April, 14, 1938 New York |
Education | College: University of California, Los Angeles/Berkeley, BA 1959 |
Alma mater | Medical School: University of Southern California, Los Angeles, MD 1963 |
Occupation(s) | Clinical Professor, Neurology (Retd) |
Organization | New York University Medical Center |
Notable work | Brown, J.W., Stenner, P. (2024), The Microgenetic Theory of Mind and Brain. Selected Essays in Process Psychology. (Ed. Denys Zhadiaiev). Routledge: New York. ISBN 9781032873848, Dec 6, 2024 |
Title | Dr., MD. |
Awards | COPERNICUS PRIZE 2003 VIRTUTI MEDICINALI 2003 |
Website | https://www.drjbrown.org/ |
Jason W. Brown, MD (born April 14, 1938) is an American neurologist and writer of works in neuropsychology and philosophy of mind. He has been a reviewer and recipient of grants and fellowships from the National Institutes of Health and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation and is or has been on the editorial boards of leading journals in his field. He has written 21 books, edited 4 others, and more than 200 articles.[ citation needed ] [1]
Brown is the founder and active chief neurologist of the Center For Cognition and Communication "CCC". He founded the entity in 1985 in New York City, a specialized private practice in evaluating and treating traumatic brain injury.[ citation needed ] [2]
Premedical studies at the University of California in Los Angeles, graduation from Berkeley in 1959. Medical school at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, with M.D. in 1963, internship at St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Washington, D.C. [ citation needed ]
He returned to Los Angeles for a residency in neurology at UCLA. 1967–1969 in the Army, in Korea and San Francisco. [3] In 1969, he took a post-doctoral fellowship at the Boston Veteran's Hospital. In 1970, he was invited to the staff of Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital in New York as assistant professor. In 1972, he published his first book, Aphasia, Apraxia, and Agnosia.[ citation needed ] [4] In 1976, he received a fellowship from the Foundations Fund for Research in Psychiatry to spend a year at the Centre Neuropsychologique et Neurolinguistique in Paris. On his return, he joined the staff of New York University Medical Center, eventually as clinical professor in neurology. The academic year 1978–79 was spent as visiting associate professor at Rockefeller University.[ citation needed ] [5]
The Center for Cognition and Communication (CCC) was established to provide treatment for clients with head injury, stroke, and other acquired and developmental disorders of cognition. [6]
Since 2002, Dr. Brown and his wife Carine house and co-organize the Psychology Nexus workshops on South of France. [7]
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