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{{distinguish|text=[[Karl Přibram]], economist}}
{{distinguish|text=[[Karl Přibram]], economist}}
{{Multiple issues|
{{Multiple issues|
{{Refimprove|date=February 2015}}
{{More citations needed|date=February 2015}}
{{One source|date=February 2015}}
{{One source|date=February 2015}}
}}
}}
{{Infobox scientist
{{Infobox scientist
|name = Karl H. Pribram
| name = Karl H. Pribram
|image = Karl_Pribram_Kepler_Museum_Prague_s.jpg
| image = Karl_Pribram_Kepler_Museum_Prague_s.jpg
|caption = Karl Pribram in Kepler Museum, Prague, 2010.
| caption = Karl Pribram in Kepler Museum, Prague, 2010.
|birth_name =
| birth_name =
|birth_date = {{birth date|1919|2|25}}
| birth_date = {{birth date|1919|2|25}}
|birth_place = [[Vienna]], [[Republic of German-Austria|Austria]]
| birth_place = [[Vienna]], [[Republic of German-Austria|Austria]]
|death_date = {{death date and age|2015|1|19|1919|2|25}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|2015|1|19|1919|2|25}}
|death_place = [[Virginia]], [[United States]]
| death_place = [[Virginia]], [[United States]]
| residence =
|residence =
| citizenship =
|citizenship =
| nationality =
|nationality =
| ethnicity =
|ethnicity =
| fields = [[Neuropsychology]]
|fields = [[Neuroscience]]
| workplaces =
| alma_mater = [[University of Chicago]] <small>([[Bachelor of Science|B.S.]], 1938; [[Doctor of Medicine|M.D.]], 1941)</small>
|workplaces =
| doctoral_advisor =
|alma_mater = [[University of Chicago]] <small>([[Bachelor of Science|B.S.]], 1938)</small><br>[[University of Chicago]] <small>([[Doctor of Medicine|M.D.]], 1941)</small>
| notable_students =
|doctoral_advisor =
| known_for = [[Holonomic brain theory]]
|notable_students =
|known_for = [[Holonomic brain theory]]
| awards =
|awards =
| religion =
| spouse = [[Katherine Neville (author)|Katherine Neville]]
|religion =
| footnotes =
|influences = [[Sir Charles Sherrington]], [[Karl Lashley]], [[Dennis Gabor]]
| website = {{URL|http://karlpribram.com/}}
|spouse = [[Katherine Neville (author)|Katherine Neville]]
|footnotes =
|website = {{URL|http://karlpribram.com/}}
}}
}}


'''Karl H. Pribram''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|p|r|aɪ|b|r|æ|m}}; {{IPA-de|ˈpʁiːbram|lang}}; February 25, 1919 – January 19, 2015) was a professor at [[Georgetown University]], in the [[United States]], an emeritus professor of [[psychology]] and [[psychiatry]] at [[Stanford University]] and distinguished professor at [[Radford University]]. [[American Board of Medical Specialties|Board-certified]] as a [[neurosurgeon]], Pribram did pioneering work on the definition of the [[limbic system]], the relationship of the [[frontal cortex]] to the limbic system, the sensory-specific "association" cortex of the [[parietal lobe|parietal]] and [[temporal lobe]]s, and the classical [[motor cortex]] of the human [[brain]]. He worked with [[Karl Lashley]] at the [[Yerkes Primate Center]] of which he was to become director later. He was professor at [[Yale University]] for ten years and at [[Stanford University]] for thirty years.
'''Karl H. Pribram''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|p|r|aɪ|b|r|æ|m}}; {{IPA|de|ˈpʁiːbram|lang}}; February 25, 1919 – January 19, 2015) was a professor at [[Georgetown University]], in the [[United States]], an emeritus professor of [[psychology]] and [[psychiatry]] at [[Stanford University]] and distinguished professor at [[Radford University]]. [[American Board of Medical Specialties|Board-certified]] as a [[neurosurgeon]], Pribram did pioneering work on the definition of the [[limbic system]], the relationship of the [[frontal cortex]] to the limbic system, the sensory-specific "association" cortex of the [[parietal lobe|parietal]] and [[temporal lobe]]s, and the classical [[motor cortex]] of the human [[brain]]. He worked with [[Karl Lashley]] at the [[Yerkes Primate Center]] of which he was to become director later. He was professor at [[Yale University]] for ten years and at [[Stanford University]] for thirty years.


To the general public, Pribram is best known for his development of the [[holonomic brain model]] of [[cognitive function]] and his contribution to ongoing neurological research into memory, emotion, motivation and [[consciousness]]. He was married to American best selling author [[Katherine Neville (author)|Katherine Neville]].
To the general public, Pribram is best known for his development of the [[holonomic brain model]] of [[cognitive function]] and his contribution to ongoing neurological research into memory, emotion, motivation and [[consciousness]], including the theory of [[holographic consciousness]]. He was married to American author [[Katherine Neville (author)|Katherine Neville]].


== Holonomic model ==
== Holonomic model ==
{{main|Holonomic brain theory}}
{{main|Holonomic brain theory|Holographic consciousness}}
{{Neuropsychology}}
{{Neuropsychology}}
Pribram's holonomic model of brain processing is described in his 1991 ''Brain and Perception'', which contains the extension of his work with [[David Bohm]]. It states that, in addition to the circuitry accomplished by the large fiber tracts in the brain, processing also occurs in webs of fine fiber branches (for instance, [[dendrite]]s) that form webs, as well as in the dynamic electrical fields that surround these dendritic "trees". In addition, the processing occurring around these dendritic trees can influence that occurring in those trees of nearby neurons whose dendrites are entangled but not in direct contact. In this way, processing in the brain can occur in a non-localized manner. This type of processing is properly described by [[Dennis Gabor]], the inventor of hologram, as quanta of information he called a "holon", an energy-based concept of information. These wavelets{{clarify|date=February 2015}} are used in quantum [[holography]], the basis of MRI, PET scans and other image processing procedures {{citation needed|reason=This is misleading at best. Quantum (what other is there?) holography does not come into play with MRI or PET to my understanding.|date=February 2015}}.
Pribram's holonomic model of brain processing is described in his 1991 ''Brain and Perception'', which contains the extension of his work with [[David Bohm]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Přibram |first=Karl H. |title=Brain and perception: holonomy and structure in figural processing |last2=Yasue |first2=Kunio |date=1991 |publisher=Erlbaum |isbn=978-0-89859-995-4 |edition=1. [print.] |location=Hillsdale, NJ}}</ref> It states that, in addition to the circuitry accomplished by the large fiber tracts in the brain, processing also occurs in webs of fine fiber branches (for instance, [[dendrite]]s) that form webs, as well as in the dynamic electrical fields that surround these dendritic "trees". In addition, the processing occurring around these dendritic trees can influence that occurring in those trees of nearby neurons whose dendrites are entangled but not in direct contact (known as [[Ephaptic coupling|ephaptic signaling]]). In this way, processing in the brain can occur in a non-localized manner. This type of processing is properly described by [[Dennis Gabor]], the inventor of holography, as quanta of information he called a "holon", an energy-based concept of information. These wavelets{{clarify|date=February 2015}} are used in quantum [[holography]], the basis of MRI, PET scans and other image-processing procedures {{citation needed|reason=This is misleading at best. Quantum (what other is there?) holography does not come into play with MRI or PET to my understanding.|date=February 2015}}.


Gabor wavelets are windowed [[Fourier transforms]] that convert complex spatial (and temporal) patterns into component waves whose amplitudes at their intersections become reinforced or diminished {{Technical-statement|date=February 2015}}. Fourier processes are the basis of holography. Holograms can
Gabor wavelets are windowed [[Fourier transforms]] that convert complex spatial and temporal patterns into component waves whose amplitudes at their intersections become reinforced or diminished {{Technical inline|date=February 2015}}. Fourier processes are the basis of holography. Holograms can correlate and store a huge amount of information and have the advantage that the inverse transform returns the results of correlation into the spatial and temporal patterns that guide us in navigating our universe.
correlate and store a huge amount of information - and have the advantage that the inverse transform returns the results of correlation into the spatial and temporal patterns that guide us in navigating our universe.


[[David Bohm]] had suggested that were we to view the cosmos without the lenses that outfit our telescopes, the universe would appear to us as a hologram. Pribram extended this insight by noting that were we deprived of the lenses of our eyes and the lens-like processes of our other sensory receptors, we would be immersed in holographic experiences.
[[David Bohm]] suggested that were we to view the cosmos without the lenses that outfit our telescopes, the universe would appear to us as a hologram. Pribram extended this insight by noting that were we deprived of the lenses of our eyes and the lens-like processes of our other sensory receptors, we would be immersed in holographic experiences.


== Other contributions ==
== Other contributions ==
Line 50: Line 48:
His account of how his discoveries were made is in his book ''The Form Within'' which was published in 2013. It includes stories of his encounters with leading scientists and scholars of the day, and amusing stories like how he lost part of a finger when his hand was slammed down by the chimpanzee [[Washoe (chimpanzee)|Washoe]] at the University of Oklahoma.
His account of how his discoveries were made is in his book ''The Form Within'' which was published in 2013. It includes stories of his encounters with leading scientists and scholars of the day, and amusing stories like how he lost part of a finger when his hand was slammed down by the chimpanzee [[Washoe (chimpanzee)|Washoe]] at the University of Oklahoma.


In 1999, he was the inaugural winner of the Dagmar and Václav Havel Award for uniting the sciences and the humanities. He died in 2015 in [[Virginia]], aged 95.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.karlpribram.com/karl-pribram-1919-2015/|title=Karl Pribram 1919-2015 « Karl Pribram|publisher=}}</ref>
In 1999, he was the inaugural winner of the [[The VIZE 97 Prize|Dagmar and Václav Havel Award]] for uniting the sciences and the humanities. He died in 2015 in [[Virginia]], aged 95.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.karlpribram.com/karl-pribram-1919-2015/|title=Karl Pribram 1919–2015 « Karl Pribram}}</ref>

== Stanford assault case ==
In 1975, Stanford University put Pribram on two years probation and lowered his salary following a university investigation into an alleged assault and other mistreatment of [[Barbara Honegger]].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1983/08/30/us/friends-say-feminist-heroine-is-sincere-if-eccentric.html|title=Friends Say Feminist Heroine is Sincere if Eccentric|work=New York Times|date=August 30, 1983|last=Cummings|first=Judith|access-date=November 6, 2020}}</ref>


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
* {{cite book| last =Miller| first =George |author2=[[Eugene Galanter|Galanter, Eugene]] |author3=Pribram, Karl| title =Plans and the structure of behavior| publisher =[[Henry Holt and Company|Holt, Rinehart and Winston]]| year =1960| location =[[New York City|New York]]| isbn=0-03-010075-5 }}
* {{cite book| last =Miller| first =George| author2 =Galanter, Eugene| author2-link =Eugene Galanter| author3 =Pribram, Karl| title =Plans and the structure of behavior| publisher =[[Henry Holt and Company|Holt, Rinehart and Winston]]| year =1960| location =[[New York City|New York]]| isbn =0-03-010075-5| url =https://archive.org/details/plansstructureo00mill}}
* DeVore, Steven; Pribram, Karl (1985) ''[http://www.sybervision.com/Achievement.com/index.html The Neuropsychology of Achievement.]{{dead link|date=December 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}'' Pleasanton, CA, SyberVision Systems. ASIN: B000M6COW4
* DeVore, Steven; Pribram, Karl (1985) ''[http://www.sybervision.com/Achievement.com/index.html The Neuropsychology of Achievement.]{{dead link|date=December 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}'' Pleasanton, CA, SyberVision Systems. ASIN: B000M6COW4
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20151222133420/http://www.sybervision.com/Achievement/index.html]{{cite book| last =Pribram| first =Karl H.| title =Brain and behaviour| publisher =[[Penguin Books]]| year =1969| location =Hammondsworth| isbn=0-14-080521-4 }}
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20151222133420/http://www.sybervision.com/Achievement/index.html]{{cite book| last =Pribram| first =Karl H.| title =Brain and behaviour| publisher =[[Penguin Books]]| year =1969| location =Hammondsworth| isbn=0-14-080521-4 }}
* {{cite book| last =Pribram| first =Karl| title = Languages of the brain; experimental paradoxes and principles in neuropsychology| publisher =[[Prentice-Hall]]| location =[[Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey|Englewood Cliffs, N. J.]]| year =1971| isbn =0-13-522730-5 }}
* {{cite book| last =Pribram| first =Karl| title = Languages of the brain; experimental paradoxes and principles in neuropsychology| publisher =[[Prentice-Hall]]| location =[[Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey|Englewood Cliffs, N. J.]]| year =1971| isbn =0-13-522730-5 }}
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20151222133420/http://www.sybervision.com/Achievement/index.html][https://web.archive.org/web/20151222133420/http://www.sybervision.com/Achievement/index.html]{{cite book| last =Pribram| first =Karl|author2=Gill, Morton M.| title = Freud's "Project" re-assessed: preface to contemporary cognitive theory and neuropsychology| publisher =Basic Books| year =1976| location =[[New York City|New York]]| isbn=0-465-02569-2}}
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20151222133420/http://www.sybervision.com/Achievement/index.html][https://web.archive.org/web/20151222133420/http://www.sybervision.com/Achievement/index.html]{{cite book| last =Pribram| first =Karl| author2 =Gill, Morton M.| title =Freud's "Project" re-assessed: preface to contemporary cognitive theory and neuropsychology| publisher =Basic Books| year =1976| location =[[New York City|New York]]| isbn =0-465-02569-2| url =https://archive.org/details/freudsprojectrea0000prib}}
*Joye, S.R. (2017). ''The Little Book of Consciousness: Pribram's Holonomic Brain Theory and Bohm's Implicate Order,'' The Viola Institute, {{ISBN|978-0-9988785-4-6}}
*Joye, S.R. (2017). ''The Little Book of Consciousness: Pribram's Holonomic Brain Theory and Bohm's Implicate Order,'' The Viola Institute, {{ISBN|978-0-9988785-4-6}}
* {{cite book| last =Pribram| first =Karl| title = Brain and perception: holonomy and structure in figural processing| publisher =[[Lawrence Erlbaum Associates]]| year =1991| location =[[Hillsdale, New Jersey|Hillsdale, N. J.]]| isbn =0-89859-995-4 }}
* {{cite book| last =Pribram| first =Karl| title = Brain and perception: holonomy and structure in figural processing| publisher =[[Lawrence Erlbaum Associates]]| year =1991| location =[[Hillsdale, New Jersey|Hillsdale, N. J.]]| isbn =0-89859-995-4 }}
* {{cite book| last =Globus| first =Gordon G.|author2=Pribram, Karl H. |author3=Vitiello, Giuseppe | title = Brain And Being: At The Boundary Between Science, Philosophy, Language, And Arts (Advances in Consciousness Research, 58)| publisher =John Benjamins Publishing Co.| date =2004-09-30| isbn =1-58811-550-X }}
* {{cite book| last =Globus| first =Gordon G.|author2=Pribram, Karl H. |author3=Vitiello, Giuseppe | title = Brain And Being: At The Boundary Between Science, Philosophy, Language, And Arts (Advances in Consciousness Research, 58)| publisher =John Benjamins Publishing Co.| date =2004-09-30| isbn =1-58811-550-X }}
* {{cite book| author =Pribram, Karl (ed.)| title =On the biology of learning| publisher =[[Harcourt Trade Publishers|Harcourt Brace & World]]| year =1969| location =[[New York City|New York]]| isbn=0-15-567520-6 }}
* {{cite book| editor =Pribram, Karl| title =On the biology of learning| publisher =[[Harcourt Trade Publishers|Harcourt Brace & World]]| year =1969| location =[[New York City|New York]]| isbn =0-15-567520-6| url =https://archive.org/details/onbiologyoflearn0000unse}}
* {{cite book| author =Pribram, Karl, & Broadbent, Donald (eds.)| title =Biology of memory| publisher =Academic Press| year =1970| location =[[New York City|New York]]| isbn=0-12-564350-0}}
* {{cite book| author =Pribram, Karl, & Broadbent, Donald | title =Biology of memory| publisher =Academic Press| year =1970| location =[[New York City|New York]]| isbn =0-12-564350-0| url =https://archive.org/details/biologyofmemory0000prib}}
* {{cite book| author =Pribram, K. H., & [[A.R. Luria|Luria, A. R.]] (eds.)| title =Psychophysiology of the frontal lobes| publisher =Academic Press| year =1973| location =[[New York City|New York]]| isbn=0-12-564340-3 }}
* {{cite book| author =Pribram, K. H., & [[A.R. Luria|Luria, A. R.]] | title =Psychophysiology of the frontal lobes| publisher =Academic Press| year =1973| location =[[New York City|New York]]| isbn=0-12-564340-3 }}
* {{cite book| author =Pribram, Karl, & Isaacson, Robert L. (eds.)| title =The Hippocampus| publisher =Plenum Press| year =1975| location =[[New York City|New York]]| isbn=0-306-37535-4 }}
* {{cite book| author =Pribram, Karl, & Isaacson, Robert L.| title =The Hippocampus| publisher =Plenum Press| year =1975| location =[[New York City|New York]]| isbn=0-306-37535-4 }}
* {{cite book| author =Pribram, Karl (ed.)| title = Rethinking neural networks: quantum fields and biological data| publisher =[[Lawrence Erlbaum Associates|Erlbaum]]| year =1993| location =[[Hillsdale, New Jersey|Hillsdale, N. J.]]| isbn=0-8058-1466-3 }}
* {{cite book| editor =Pribram, Karl| title = Rethinking neural networks: quantum fields and biological data| publisher =[[Lawrence Erlbaum Associates|Erlbaum]]| year =1993| location =[[Hillsdale, New Jersey|Hillsdale, N. J.]]| isbn=0-8058-1466-3 }}
* {{cite book| author =Pribram, Karl (ed.)| title = Origins: brain and self organization| publisher =[[Lawrence Erlbaum Associates|Lawrence Erlbaum]]| year =1994| location =[[Hillsdale, New Jersey|Hillsdale, N. J.]]| isbn=0-8058-1786-7 }}
* {{cite book| editor =Pribram, Karl| title = Origins: brain and self organization| publisher =[[Lawrence Erlbaum Associates|Lawrence Erlbaum]]| year =1994| location =[[Hillsdale, New Jersey|Hillsdale, N. J.]]| isbn=0-8058-1786-7 }}
* {{cite book| author =King, Joseph, & Pribram, Karl (eds.)| title = Scale in conscious experience: Is the brain too important to be left to the specialists to study?| publisher =[[Lawrence Erlbaum Associates]]| year =1995| location =[[Mahwah, New Jersey|Mahwah, N. J.]]| isbn =0-8058-2178-3 }}
* {{cite book| author =King, Joseph, & Pribram, Karl| title = Scale in conscious experience: Is the brain too important to be left to the specialists to study?| publisher =[[Lawrence Erlbaum Associates]]| year =1995| location =[[Mahwah, New Jersey|Mahwah, N. J.]]| isbn =0-8058-2178-3 }}
* {{cite book| author =Pribram, Karl, & King, Joseph (eds.)| title =Learning as self-organization| publisher =[[Lawrence Erlbaum Associates|L. Erlbaum Associates]]| year=1996| location =[[Mahwah, New Jersey|Mahwah, N. J.]]| isbn=0-8058-2586-X }}
* {{cite book| author =Pribram, Karl, & King, Joseph| title =Learning as self-organization| publisher =[[Lawrence Erlbaum Associates|L. Erlbaum Associates]]| year=1996| location =[[Mahwah, New Jersey|Mahwah, N. J.]]| isbn=0-8058-2586-X }}
* {{cite book| author =Pribram, Karl (ed.)| title = Brain and values: is a biological science of values possible| publisher =[[Lawrence Erlbaum Associates]]| year =1998| location =[[Mahwah, New Jersey|Mahwah, N. J.]]| isbn =0-8058-3154-1}}
* {{cite book| editor =Pribram, Karl| title = Brain and values: is a biological science of values possible| publisher =[[Lawrence Erlbaum Associates]]| year =1998| location =[[Mahwah, New Jersey|Mahwah, N. J.]]| isbn =0-8058-3154-1}}
* {{cite web| last =Pribram| first =Karl| title =Brain and Mathematics| publisher =Pari Center for New Learning| year =2004| url =http://www.paricenter.com/library/papers/pribram01.php| accessdate =2007-10-25}}
* {{cite web| last =Pribram| first =Karl| title =Brain and Mathematics| publisher =Pari Center for New Learning| year =2004| url =http://www.paricenter.com/library/papers/pribram01.php| access-date =2007-10-25| archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20071109222241/http://www.paricenter.com/library/papers/pribram01.php| archive-date =2007-11-09| url-status =dead}}
* {{cite web| title =Like Bohm, Karl Pribram sees the holographic nature of reality| work =The Ground of Faith|date=October 2003| url =http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~thegroundoffaith/issues/2003-10/pribram.html| accessdate =2007-10-25}}
* {{cite web| title =Like Bohm, Karl Pribram sees the holographic nature of reality| work =The Ground of Faith| date =October 2003| url =http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~thegroundoffaith/issues/2003-10/pribram.html| access-date =2007-10-25| archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20080207152157/http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~thegroundoffaith/issues/2003-10/pribram.html| archive-date =2008-02-07| url-status =dead}}
* {{cite web| last =Mishlove| first =Jeffrey| title =The Holographic Brain with Karl Pribram, MA; Ph.D.| work =TWM.co.nz| year =1998| url =http://twm.co.nz/pribram.htm| accessdate =2007-10-25| deadurl =yes| archiveurl =https://web.archive.org/web/20071012130433/http://twm.co.nz/pribram.htm| archivedate =2007-10-12| df =}}
* {{cite web| last =Mishlove| first =Jeffrey| title =The Holographic Brain with Karl Pribram, MA; Ph.D.| work =TWM.co.nz| year =1998| url =http://twm.co.nz/pribram.htm| access-date =2007-10-25| url-status =dead| archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20071012130433/http://twm.co.nz/pribram.htm| archive-date =2007-10-12}}
* {{cite book| last =Pribram| first =Karl| title = The Form Within| publisher =Prospecta Press| year =2013}}
* {{cite book| last =Pribram| first =Karl| title = The Form Within| publisher =Prospecta Press| year =2013}}


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.acsa2000.net/bcngroup/jponkp/ "Comparison between Holographic Brain Theory and conventional models of neuronal computation"] – academic paper on Pribram's work
* [http://www.acsa2000.net/bcngroup/jponkp/ "Comparison between Holographic Brain Theory and conventional models of neuronal computation"] – academic paper on Pribram's work
* [http://www.katherineneville.com/the-author/katherine-at-home/karl-pribram/ "Pribram Receives Havel Prize For His Work in Neuroscience"] – news article
* [http://www.katherineneville.com/the-author/katherine-at-home/karl-pribram/ "Pribram Receives Havel Prize For His Work in Neuroscience"] – news article
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110605084722/http://www.mindspring.com/~quantum.computing/ "Winner 1998 Noetic Medal for Consciousness & Brain Research - For Lifetime Achievement"]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110605084722/http://www.mindspring.com/~quantum.computing/ "Winner 1998 Noetic Medal for Consciousness & Brain Research For Lifetime Achievement"]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110303021637/http://www.consciousnessprecedesmind.org/global-lens-channel/integral-models-of-reality-1.html Global Lens Interview] (Video)
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110303021637/http://www.consciousnessprecedesmind.org/global-lens-channel/integral-models-of-reality-1.html Global Lens Interview] (Video)
* [http://karlpribram.com/wp-content/uploads/pdf/theory/T-166a.pdf The implicate brain] by Karl H. Pribram, karlhpribram.com
* [http://karlpribram.com/wp-content/uploads/pdf/theory/T-166a.pdf The implicate brain] by Karl H. Pribram, karlhpribram.com
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Pribram, Karl H.}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Pribram, Karl H.}}
[[Category:American neuroscientists]]
[[Category:American cognitive neuroscientists]]
[[Category:Austrian neuroscientists]]
[[Category:Austrian neuroscientists]]
[[Category:Austrian emigrants to the United States]]
[[Category:Austrian emigrants to the United States]]
[[Category:Consciousness researchers and theorists]]
[[Category:American consciousness researchers and theorists]]
[[Category:Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]
[[Category:Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]
[[Category:Georgetown University faculty]]
[[Category:Georgetown University faculty]]

Latest revision as of 08:41, 20 August 2024

Karl H. Pribram
Karl Pribram in Kepler Museum, Prague, 2010.
Born(1919-02-25)February 25, 1919
DiedJanuary 19, 2015(2015-01-19) (aged 95)
Alma materUniversity of Chicago (B.S., 1938; M.D., 1941)
Known forHolonomic brain theory
SpouseKatherine Neville
Scientific career
FieldsNeuropsychology
Websitekarlpribram.com

Karl H. Pribram (/ˈprbræm/; German: [ˈpʁiːbram]; February 25, 1919 – January 19, 2015) was a professor at Georgetown University, in the United States, an emeritus professor of psychology and psychiatry at Stanford University and distinguished professor at Radford University. Board-certified as a neurosurgeon, Pribram did pioneering work on the definition of the limbic system, the relationship of the frontal cortex to the limbic system, the sensory-specific "association" cortex of the parietal and temporal lobes, and the classical motor cortex of the human brain. He worked with Karl Lashley at the Yerkes Primate Center of which he was to become director later. He was professor at Yale University for ten years and at Stanford University for thirty years.

To the general public, Pribram is best known for his development of the holonomic brain model of cognitive function and his contribution to ongoing neurological research into memory, emotion, motivation and consciousness, including the theory of holographic consciousness. He was married to American author Katherine Neville.

Holonomic model

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Pribram's holonomic model of brain processing is described in his 1991 Brain and Perception, which contains the extension of his work with David Bohm.[1] It states that, in addition to the circuitry accomplished by the large fiber tracts in the brain, processing also occurs in webs of fine fiber branches (for instance, dendrites) that form webs, as well as in the dynamic electrical fields that surround these dendritic "trees". In addition, the processing occurring around these dendritic trees can influence that occurring in those trees of nearby neurons whose dendrites are entangled but not in direct contact (known as ephaptic signaling). In this way, processing in the brain can occur in a non-localized manner. This type of processing is properly described by Dennis Gabor, the inventor of holography, as quanta of information he called a "holon", an energy-based concept of information. These wavelets[clarification needed] are used in quantum holography, the basis of MRI, PET scans and other image-processing procedures [citation needed].

Gabor wavelets are windowed Fourier transforms that convert complex spatial and temporal patterns into component waves whose amplitudes at their intersections become reinforced or diminished [jargon]. Fourier processes are the basis of holography. Holograms can correlate and store a huge amount of information and have the advantage that the inverse transform returns the results of correlation into the spatial and temporal patterns that guide us in navigating our universe.

David Bohm suggested that were we to view the cosmos without the lenses that outfit our telescopes, the universe would appear to us as a hologram. Pribram extended this insight by noting that were we deprived of the lenses of our eyes and the lens-like processes of our other sensory receptors, we would be immersed in holographic experiences.

Other contributions

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In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Pribram's neurobehavioral experiments established the composition of the limbic system and the executive functions of the prefrontal cortex. Pribram also discovered the sensory specific systems of the association cortex, and showed that these systems operate to organize the choices we make among sensory stimuli, not the sensing of the stimuli themselves.

His account of how his discoveries were made is in his book The Form Within which was published in 2013. It includes stories of his encounters with leading scientists and scholars of the day, and amusing stories like how he lost part of a finger when his hand was slammed down by the chimpanzee Washoe at the University of Oklahoma.

In 1999, he was the inaugural winner of the Dagmar and Václav Havel Award for uniting the sciences and the humanities. He died in 2015 in Virginia, aged 95.[2]

Stanford assault case

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In 1975, Stanford University put Pribram on two years probation and lowered his salary following a university investigation into an alleged assault and other mistreatment of Barbara Honegger.[3]

Bibliography

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References

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  1. ^ Přibram, Karl H.; Yasue, Kunio (1991). Brain and perception: holonomy and structure in figural processing (1. [print.] ed.). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. ISBN 978-0-89859-995-4.
  2. ^ "Karl Pribram 1919–2015 « Karl Pribram".
  3. ^ Cummings, Judith (August 30, 1983). "Friends Say Feminist Heroine is Sincere if Eccentric". New York Times. Retrieved November 6, 2020.
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