Pierre Bonnier

Pierre Bonnier (16 August 1861 in Templeuve 22 March 1918 in Paris) was a French otologist. He was the brother of architect Louis Bonnier (1856–1946).

He studied medicine in Paris, and in 1897 began work as an assistant in the medical clinic of the Hôtel-Dieu in Paris. In 1901 he was named president of Société d’Otologie et de Laryngologie de Paris. He was a member of the Institut Psychologique (from 1902) and the Société de Neurologie (from 1903).[1]

He specialized in research of auditory and vestibular systems and their disorders.[1] The eponymous "Bonnier syndrome" is a syndrome characterized by deafness, ocular disturbances and other symptoms due to a lesion of the nucleus of Deiters.[2][3] Around 1905 he introduced the term aschématie (aschematia) for a group of symptoms indicated by an inadequate account of the space occupied by some part of the body.[4]

Selected works

  • Vertige, 1894 Vertigo.
  • L'oreille, 1896 The ear.
  • L'audition, 1901 Hearing.
  • Le sens des attitudes, 1904 Sensory dispositions.
  • La voix, sa culture physiologique; théorie nouvelle de la phonation, 1907 The voice, its physiological culture (new theory of phonation).
  • L'action directe sur les centres nerveux: centrothérapie, 1913 Direct action on the nerve centers, centrotherapy.[5]
  • Défense organique et centres nerveux, 1914 Organic defense and nerve centers.[6]

References

  1. Classic Cases in Neuropsychology, Volume 2 edited by Chris Code, Yves Joanette, Andre Roch Lecours, Claus-W. Wallesch
  2. Bonnier syndrome Medlexicon
  3. Companion to Clinical Neurology by William Pryse-Phillips
  4. A Dictionary of Hallucinations by Jan Dirk Blom
  5. HathiTrust Digital Library (published works)
  6. Most widely held works about Pierre Bonnier WorldCat Identities
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