He was born in Berlin on August 7, 1916. His thesis studied the efficacy of psychiatric treatments on delinquent adolescents. After graduating, his early work was in San Diego with neurologist Morris Bender. While living in
Dobbs Ferry, New York from 1946 to 1961, he headed the Psychophysiology Lab at the New York University-Bellevue Medical Center. His work focused on assessing brain injuries from World War II veterans, with a focus on the effects of
frontal lobe injury. From this research, he introduced the "corollary discharge" hypothesis, which says that the frontal lobe is involved in the anticipation of movement. In 1960, Teuber moved to Massachusetts to start a Department of Psychology at MIT after previous attempts had failed. At MIT, he was one of the researchers who studied the case of
H.M. He died in a sailing accident in the
Virgin Islands. ==References==