Show
10 citations
related to Logan, Cheryl A.
Show
10 citations
related to Logan, Cheryl A. as an author
Book
Logan, Cheryl A.
(2013)
Hormones, Heredity, and Race: Spectacular Failure in Interwar Vienna.
(/isis/citation/CBB001214620/)
Review
Logan, Cheryl
(2008)
Review of "Hot and Bothered: Women, Medicine, and Menopause in Modern America".
British Journal for the History of Science.
(/isis/citation/CBB000775185/)
Review
Logan, Cheryl
(2008)
Review of "The Most Secret Quintessence of Life: Sex, Glands, and Hormones, 1850--1950".
British Journal for the History of Science.
(/isis/citation/CBB000775184/)
Article
Logan, Cheryl A.
(2007)
Overheated Rats, Race, and the Double Gland: Paul Kammerer, Endocrinology and the Problem of Somatic Induction.
Journal of the History of Biology
(p. 683).
(/isis/citation/CBB000773240/)
Review
Logan, Cheryl A.
(2005)
Review of "Making Mice: Standardizing Animals for American Biomedical Research, 1900-1955".
Metascience: An International Review Journal for the History, Philosophy and Social Studies of Science.
(/isis/citation/CBB000641918/)
Review
Logan, Cheryl A.
(2003)
Review of "Pavlov's Physiology Factory: Experiment, Interpretation, Laboratory Enterprise".
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences.
(/isis/citation/CBB000300921/)
Article
Logan, Cheryl A.
(2002)
Before There Were Standards: The Role of Test Animals in the Production of Empirical Generality in Physiology.
Journal of the History of Biology
(p. 329).
(/isis/citation/CBB000200421/)
Article
Logan, Cheryl A.
(2002)
When Scientific Knowledge Becomes Scientific Discovery: The Disappearance of Classical Conditioning before Pavlov.
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences
(p. 393).
(/isis/citation/CBB000300492/)
Article
Logan, Cheryl A.
(2001)
“[A]re Norway Rats … Things”?: Diversity Versus Generality in the Use of Albino Rats in Experiments on Development and Sexuality.
Journal of the History of Biology
(p. 287).
(/isis/citation/CBB000100496/)
Article
Logan, Cheryl A.
(1999)
The altered rationale for the choice of a standard animal in experimental psychology: Henry H. Donaldson, Adolf Meyer, and “the” Albino Rat.
History of Psychology
(pp. 3-24).
(/isis/citation/CBB000083460/)
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