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Definition of Robert Barany
1. Noun. Austrian physician who developed a rotational method for testing the middle ear (1876-1936).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Robert Barany
Literary usage of Robert Barany
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Introduction to the History of Medicine by Fielding Hudson Garrison (1913)
"Great advances in the diagnosis and treatment of disease of the internal ear have
been made by Robert Barany (1876- ), of Vienna, Privatdocent at the ..."
2. Information Annual (1917)
"BARANY, Robert Dr. Robert Barany, an assistant professor in the University of
Vienna, was awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine for 19.14. ..."
3. Equilibrium and Vertigo by Isaac Hampshur Jones, Lewis Fisher (1918)
"In the past ten years Robert Barany especially has done his monumental work in
extending the field of this study into the realm of neurology. ..."
4. The Cumulative Book Index by H.W. Wilson Company (1911)
"... semicircular canals; being an excerpt of the clinical studies of Robert Barany
with notes and addenda gathered from the Vienna clinics, ..."
5. Information Annual ...: A Continuous Cyclopedia and Digest of Current Events (1917)
"... Robert Barany, an assistant professor in the University of Vienna, was awarded
the Nobel Prize for Medicine for 1914. The award and its announcement ..."
6. Physical diagnosis by Wallace Dickinson Rose (1917)
"Vertigo may be due to Meniere's disease or aural vertigo. The Barany Tests The
tests of Robert Barany, which are based upon the experimental work of ..."
7. Neurological Bulletin by Frederick Tilney, Columbia University, Dept. of Neurology (1919)
"been elaborated by the clinico-pathological and experimental work on human subjects
by Robert Barany.6 As the result of a large series of observations, ..."
8. Collected Papers by the Staff of Saint Mary's Hospital, Mayo Clinic by Saint Marys Hospital (Rochester, Minn.) (1921)
"The Vienna School of Otologists applied the work principally to disease conditions
of the ear. Robert Barany, whose epical work is familiar to all, ..."