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Gocke Cansever

729 bytes added, 13:27, 16 October 2023
Add author info.
The late '''{{FULLPAGENAME}}''' was a Turkish<refname=Gregg2005>{{REFbook
|url=https://www.google.de/books/edition/The_Middle_East/-uhBDBCc_FAC?hl=de&gbpv=1&dq=gocke+cansever&pg=PA201&printsec=frontcover
|title=The Middle East: A Cultural Psychology
|chapter=Early Childhood
|page=201
|last=Gregg
|first=Gary S.
|init=GS
|year=2005
|scope=472
|location=Oxford
|publisher=Oxford University Press
|ISBN=978-0195171990
|accessdate=2023-10-03
}}</ref> medical psychologist who worked at the {{W|Bakırköy_Psychiatric_Hospital|Bakırköy Psychiatric Hospital}}, Robert College, Istanbul,<ref>{{REFweb
|url=https://gezibilen.com/en/travelpoint/istanbul/bakirkoy-ruh-ve-sinir-hastaliklari-hastanesi
|title=Bakırköy Mental and Neurological Diseases Hospital
|last=
|first=
|init=
|publisher=
|date=
|accessdate=2023-10-02
}}</ref> medical psychologist working at the {{W|Bakırköy_Psychiatric_Hospital|Bakırköy Psychiatric Hospital}}, Robert College, Istanbul, who did the first study of the effects of [[circumcision]] on boysin the early 1960s.<ref name=Gregg2005/> Cansever (1965) administered psychological tests to twelve 5-to-7-year-old Turkish boys before and after [[Islam| Islamic]] circumcision and reported the results in her landmark paper, which was published in the ''British Journal of Medical Psychology'' in December 1965
{{PUB}}
* {{REFjournal
|first=Gocke
|init=G
|author-link=Gocke Cansever
|etal=no
|title=Psychological effects of circumcision
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