Natalia Bekhtereva


Natalia Petrovna Bekhtereva was a Soviet and Russian neuroscientist and psychologist who developed neurophysiological approaches to psychology, such as measuring the impulse activity of human neurons. She was a participant in the documentaries The Call of the Abyss and Storm of Consciousness, which aroused wide public interest.

Biography

Though the granddaughter of the famous scientist Vladimir Bekhterev, she was brought up with her brother in an orphanage. Despite her impoverished beginnings, she was able to graduate from the First Pavlov State Medical University of St. Petersburg and the graduate school of the Pavlov Institute of Physiology. Her education came during turbulent times. In the summer of 1941, more than 700 students entered the University but as a result of the Siege of Leningrad only 4 graduates survived, the rest having died from war and famine.
She first worked as a junior research fellow at the Institute of Experimental Medicine, USSR Academy of Medical Sciences where she obtained her Candidate of Biological Sciences. After working her way up from a senior research fellow to the head of the laboratory and Deputy Director, she worked at the Research Neurosurgical Institute named after Professor Andrey L. Polenov of the USSR Ministry of Health. In 1959 she became a Doctor of Medicine. Since 1962 she was head of the Department of Human Neurophysiology at the Institute of Institute of Experimental Medicine in the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences. From 1970 to 1990 she served as the Deputy Director of Research.
In 1975, she became a professor of the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences, and in 1981 at the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union. In 1990, she was the scientific director of the Center "Brain" of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union and in 1992 she became the head of the scientific group of the neurophysiology of thinking, creativity and consciousness of the Institute for Human Brain of the RAS.
She was Vice President of the International Union of Physiological Sciences and Vice President of the International Organization for Psychophysiology.
She worked as editor-in-chief of the academic journals Human Physiology and International Journal of Psychophysiology.
She was Deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union of the 8th convocation and People's Deputy of the Soviet Union.

Rewards and titles

Death

She died in the morning of June 22, 2008 in Hamburg at the St. George's Hospital at 84 after a protracted illness.

Tribute

On July 7, 2020, Google celebrated her 96th birthday with a Google Doodle.
6074 Bechtereva, a minor planet named after Natalia Bekhtereva.
The is named after her.

Family

Her grandfather was Vladimir Bekhterev, the famous psychiatrist, neuropathologist, physiologist, psychologist and founder of reflexology. Her father was Peter Bekhterev, an engineer and inventor and her mother was Zinaïda Bekhtereva, a doctor.
Her first husband was Vsevolod Medvedev, a physiologist and she had a son from her first marriage, Svyatoslav Medvedev, also a physiologist. Her second husband was Ivan Kashtelyan, an economist, with whom she raised a stepson Alexander and a granddaughter Natalia Medvedeva, a psychiatrist.

Publications

Bekhtereva published more than 360 works, some of them in English, including:
  • 1962. Biopotentials of Cerebral Hemispheres in Brain Tumors.
  • 1978. Neurophysiological Aspects of Human Mental Activity.
  • 1981. Psychophysiology Today and Tomorrow..

Documentary films with her participation

Зов бездны ; Штурм сознания. Громкое дело.