Edgar Bérillon

Edgar Bérillon (ca. 1890)

Edgar Bérillon (23 May 1859, Saint-Fargeau 6 March 1948) was a French psychiatrist known for his research of hypnosis.

He studied medicine in Paris, and from 1882 worked as a préparateur of comparative pathology courses at the Muséum d'histoire naturelle. In 1884 he received his medical doctorate with the dissertation-thesis "De l'indépendance fonctionnelle des deux hémisphères cérébraux". He worked as an inspector of Asiles d'aliénés de la Seine (Mental asylums of the Seine), and from 1888, taught classes at the École pratique de la faculté de médecine. In 1900 he became a professor at the École de Psychologie in Paris.[1]

In 1886 he became director of the "Revue de l'hypnotisme expérimental et thérapeutique",[1] a journal that was later renamed as "Revue de l'hypnotisme et de la psychologie physiologique".[2] In 1889 he was named general secretary of the Société d'hypnologie et de psychologie, and in 1905 was appointed president of the Société de pathologie comparé.[1]

Selected works

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.