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Neuroscientist
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=== Medieval European beliefs and Andreas Vesalius === [[Middle Ages|Medieval]] beliefs generally held true the proposals of Galen, including the attribution of mental processes to specific ventricles in the brain. Functions of regions of the brain were defined based on their texture and composition: [[memory]] function was attributed to the posterior ventricle, a harder region of the brain and thus a good place for memory storage.<ref name=":2" /> [[Andreas Vesalius]] redirected the study of [[neuroscience]] away from the anatomical focus; he considered the attribution of functions based on location to be crude. Pushing away from the superficial proposals made by Galen and medieval beliefs, Vesalius did not believe that studying anatomy would lead to any significant advances in the understanding of thinking and the brain.<ref name=":2" />
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