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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hans_SelyeHans Selye - Wikipedia

    Hans Selye. János Hugo Bruno " Hans " Selye CC ( / ˈsɛljeɪ / [dubious – discuss]; Hungarian: Selye János Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈʃɛjɛ]; January 26, 1907 – October 16, 1982) was a pioneering Hungarian-Canadian endocrinologist who conducted important scientific work on the hypothetical non-specific response of an organism to stressors.

  2. Selye was the first scientist to identify ‘stress’ as underpinning the nonspecific signs and symptoms of illness. The stress concept re-entered Selyes life during his fellowship at McGill when Prof Collip placed him in charge of identifying various female sex hormones that were yet undiscovered.

    • Siang Yong Tan, A Yip
    • 2018
  3. Hans Selye was an endocrinologist known for his studies of the effects of stress on the human body. Selye was educated at the German University of Prague (M.D., 1929; Ph.D., 1931) and at the universities of Paris and Rome. In 1931 he came to the United States to work as a research fellow at Johns.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
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  5. Selye spent a significant time of his life in Hungary, in Czechoslovakia, in the USA and in Canada. I first met Selye in 1949, when he was writing his monumental tome “Stress”. He was already internationally regarded as one of the world’s leading authorities on endocrinology, steroid chemistry, experimental surgery and pathology.

  6. Mar 10, 2016 · History. health. Meet the Doctor Who Changed Our Understanding of Stress. 3 minute read. Hans Selye's experiments with rats shed pioneering light on how stress affects health Toronto Public...

  7. According to many stress researchers, as well as historians, modern biological formulations of stress can be traced back to a brief and rather speculative article written by the Austrian-born Hungarian scientist Hans Selye (1907–82) in 1936.

  8. Feb 12, 2023 · July 1936: Hans Selye describes in 74 lines in the prestigious journal Nature a new concept: Stress [ 1 ]. Eighty years later, stress is an integral part of our lives. Hans Selye who wrote “Stress is the spice of life” is the founding father of the concept of general adaptation syndrome. His notoriety earned him the title of “Einstein of ...

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