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  1. Sep 9, 2021 · Galvani believed he had found proof of what he called ‘animal electricity’, an innate force in the body’s nerves. He compared the frog’s muscle fibres to a Leyden jar, an electrical component which stores a high-voltage charge between electrical conductors.

  2. Luigi Galvani (/ ɡ æ l ˈ v ɑː n i /, also US: / ɡ ɑː l-/; Italian: [luˈiːdʒi ɡalˈvaːni]; Latin: Aloysius Galvanus; 9 September 1737 – 4 December 1798) was an Italian physician, physicist, biologist and philosopher, who studied animal electricity. In 1780, he discovered that the muscles of dead frogs' legs twitched when struck by ...

  3. Numerous ingenious observations and experiments have been credited to him; in 1786, for example, he obtained muscular contraction in a frog by touching its nerves with a pair of scissors during an electrical storm.

  4. Luigi Galvani, a lecturer at the University of Bologna, was researching the nervous system of frogs from around 1780. This research included the muscular response to opiates and static electricity, for which experiments the spinal cord and rear legs of a frog were dissected out together and the skin removed.

  5. May 24, 2023 · Luigi Galvani's discovery that electricity was the cause of muscle contraction, and that nerves send messages with electricity, laid the foundations for electrophysiology ...more.

  6. A chance observation led Luigi Galvani (1737-98) to discover animal electricity in 1771. When the nerve of a frog that Galvani's wife was preparing for soup was accidentally touched with a knife a muscle contraction occurred despite the frog not being connected to an electrical machine.

  7. During an electrical experiment, Italian physician and anatomist Luigi Galvani watched as a scalpel touched a dissected frog on a metal mount — and the frog’s leg kicked. Further experiments led him to theorize that living bodies contain an innate vital force that he called “animal electricity.”

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