Alexander Luria
![Luria, {{c.|1940}}](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/67/Alexander_Luria.jpg)
It is less known that Luria's main interests, before the war, were in the field of cultural and developmental research in psychology. He became famous for his studies of low-educated populations of nomadic Uzbeks in the Uzbek SSR arguing that they demonstrate different (and lower) psychological performance than their contemporaries and compatriots under the economically more developed conditions of socialist collective farming (the ''kolkhoz''). He was one of the founders of Cultural-Historical Psychology and a colleague of Lev Vygotsky. Apart from his work with Vygotsky, Luria is widely known for two extraordinary psychological case studies: ''The Mind of a Mnemonist'', about Solomon Shereshevsky, who had highly advanced memory; and ''The Man with a Shattered World'', about Lev Zasetsky, a man with a severe traumatic brain injury.
During his career Luria worked in a wide range of scientific fields at such institutions as the Academy of Communist Education (1920-1930s), Experimental Defectological Institute (1920-1930s, 1950-1960s, both in Moscow), Ukrainian Psychoneurological Academy (Kharkiv, early 1930s), All-Union Institute of Experimental Medicine, and the Burdenko Institute of Neurosurgery (late 1930s). A ''Review of General Psychology'' survey, published in 2002, ranked Luria as the 69th most cited psychologist of the 20th century. Provided by Wikipedia
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Fuente: Catálogo bibliográfico
Tipo de Material: Book
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Fuente: Catálogo bibliográfico
Tipo de Material: Book