Goering Phenomenon

Hering phenomenon is a phenomenon that was discovered by German physiologist and neurophysiologist Otto Hering in the 1920s. Hering was one of the first researchers to study the connection between the brain and behavior of animals. He conducted experiments on rats to understand how the brain controlled their movements and behavior.

Hering discovered that rats can learn new skills, such as finding food or avoiding danger. He also found that rats learned faster if they were rewarded for their actions. This discovery led to the creation of the concept of “conditioning,” a theory that explains how animals learn to respond to certain stimuli.

However, Goering did not stop there. He continued to study the brains of rats and other animals to understand how they worked and how this information could be used to treat people. In 1934, Goering became director of the Institute of Experimental Psychology in Berlin, where he continued his research.

At the end of his life, Goering was arrested for participation in the Nazi party and spent the last years of his life in prison. His work was forgotten for many years, but today it is becoming popular again thanks to research in neuroscience and behavioral psychology.