Entrada Nombre personal
Número de registros utilizados en: 1
001 - CONTROL NUMBER
- control field: 2766
003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER
- control field: DLC
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
- control field: 20170302102604.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS
- fixed length control field: 800522n| azannaabn |a aaa
010 ## - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CONTROL NUMBER
- LC control number: n 50015212
035 ## - SYSTEM CONTROL NUMBER
- System control number: (OCoLC)oca00050679
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
- Original cataloging agency: DLC
- Language of cataloging: eng
- Description conventions: rda
- Transcribing agency: DLC
- Modifying agency: DLC
- Modifying agency: UPB
- Modifying agency: DLC
- Modifying agency: IlMpPL
- Modifying agency: DLC
046 ## - SPECIAL CODED DATES
- Birth date: 1933-07-09
- Death date: 2015-08-30
- Source of date scheme: edtf
100 1# - HEADING--PERSONAL NAME
- Personal name: Sacks, Oliver,
- Dates associated with a name: 1933-2015
370 ## - ASSOCIATED PLACE
- Place of birth: London (England)
- Place of death: Manhattan (New York, N.Y.)
- Associated country: Great Britain
- Associated country: United States
- Source of term: naf
372 ## - FIELD OF ACTIVITY
- Field of activity: Neurology
- Source of term: lcsh
373 ## - ASSOCIATED GROUP
- Associated group: New York University. School of Medicine
- Source of term: naf
- Start period: 2012
- Source of information: New York times WWW site, viewed Aug. 31, 2015
373 ## - ASSOCIATED GROUP
- Associated group: Columbia University
- Start period: 2007
- End period: 2012
- Source of information: New York times WWW site, viewed Aug. 31, 2015
373 ## - ASSOCIATED GROUP
- Associated group: Beth Abraham Hospital
- Source of term: naf
- Start period: 1966
- Source of information: New York times WWW site, viewed Aug. 31, 2015
373 ## - ASSOCIATED GROUP
- Associated group: Albert Einstein College of Medicine
- Source of term: naf
- Start period: 1965
- End period: 2007
- Source of information: New York times WWW site, viewed Aug. 31, 2015
374 ## - OCCUPATION
- Occupation: Neurologists
- Occupation: Medical teaching personnel
- Occupation: College teachers
- Source of term: lcsh
375 ## - GENDER
- Gender: male
377 ## - ASSOCIATED LANGUAGE
- Language code: eng
378 ## - FULLER FORM OF PERSONAL NAME
- Fuller form of personal name: Oliver Wolf
400 1# - SEE FROM TRACING--PERSONAL NAME
- Personal name: Sacks, Oliver W.
- Fuller form of name: (Oliver Wolf),
- Dates associated with a name: 1933-2015
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: His Migraine: the evolution of a common disorder, 1970:
- Information found: t.p. (Oliver W. Sacks)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: His A leg to stand on, c1984:
- Information found: t.p. (Oliver Sacks)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: His A leg to stand on, 1988, c1984:
- Information found: CIP t.p. (author, The man who mistook his wife for a hat) book t.p. (Oliver Sacks)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Hallucinations, 2012:
- Information found: t.p. verso (Oliver Sacks, M.D.) p. 3 of jkt. (professor of neurology at the NYU School of Medicine)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: 678 field information, Aug. 31, 2015
- Information found: (b. 1933; B.M., B.Ch.; instructor in neurology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, N.Y. and consultant neurologist, Beth Abraham Hospital, N.Y.)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: LC database, Aug. 31, 2015
- Information found: (heading: Sacks, Oliver W.; usage: Oliver Sacks [predominant form], Oliver W. Sacks)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: New York times WWW site, viewed Aug. 31, 2015
- Information found: (in obituary published Aug. 30: Oliver Sacks; b. Oliver Wolf Sacks, July 9, 1933, London; moved to America in the early 1960s ("In 1961, I declared my intention to become a United States citizen, which may have been a genuine intention, but I never got round to it," he told The guardian in 2005); moved to New York in 1965; d. Sunday [Aug. 30, 2015], Manhattan, aged 82; neurologist and acclaimed author who explored some of the brain's strangest pathways in best-selling case histories like The man who mistook his wife for a hat, using his patients' disorders as starting points for eloquent meditations on consciousness and the human condition)