1. Personal recollections of prominent neuroscientists whom the author met during the years 1930–1950 are given with special reference to neurophysiology. Some traits of Paul Hoffmann, Walter R. Hess, Hans Berger, Jan F. Toennies, Erich von Holst, and the philosopher Nicolai Hartmann are sketched. 2. In 1930–1932 Paul Hoffmann gave the first suggestions about neurophysiology to the young medical student. A visit to Vogt’s Brain Research Institute in Berlin in 1934 demonstrated the wide extent of the brain sciences and brought the first contact with Jan Toennies. There followed neuroanatomical work under H. Spatz in Munich and a short clinical intermezzo with K. Beringer in Freiburg. The award of a Rockefeller Fellowship in 1936 for work in ...
It has long been known that nervous activity is accompanied by changes of electrical potential. As ...
We of the American Electroencephalographic Society have been brought together, first, by our princip...
This paper commemorates the careers and the scientific influence of the clinical neurologists Kurt G...
In a recent commentary about ‘‘neural reuse,’ ’ a com-mentator noted that the implications of these ...
Item does not contain fulltextGerman neuroscientists played a crucial role in the foundation of neur...
The recent Congress of the Italian Society of Neuroscience in Verona attracted several hundred parti...
This dissertation examines the historical context of nineteenth- and twentieth-century neurophysiolo...
Adolf Beck, born in 1863 at Cracow (Poland), joined the Department of Physiology of the Jagiellonian...
most of all, Paris, where Lapicque was losing credit for his studies on chronaxie. Parisian neurophy...
Over the course of several decades at the Faculty of Medicine in Novi Sad, fundamental studies in th...
Adolf Beck, born in 1863 in Kraków (Poland), joined the Department of Physiology of the Jagiellonian...
Cette contribution explore le rôle institutionnel, scientifique et clinique de l'électroencéphalogra...
In 1593 in Genoa, the Magistrate, of hospitals for the incurable, decided to allocate two beds for a...
In 1593, the Magistrate of hospitals for the incurable in Genoa decided to allocate two beds for \u2...
I would like to thank Hermann J. Müller for providing valuable support, and for numerous inspiring r...
It has long been known that nervous activity is accompanied by changes of electrical potential. As ...
We of the American Electroencephalographic Society have been brought together, first, by our princip...
This paper commemorates the careers and the scientific influence of the clinical neurologists Kurt G...
In a recent commentary about ‘‘neural reuse,’ ’ a com-mentator noted that the implications of these ...
Item does not contain fulltextGerman neuroscientists played a crucial role in the foundation of neur...
The recent Congress of the Italian Society of Neuroscience in Verona attracted several hundred parti...
This dissertation examines the historical context of nineteenth- and twentieth-century neurophysiolo...
Adolf Beck, born in 1863 at Cracow (Poland), joined the Department of Physiology of the Jagiellonian...
most of all, Paris, where Lapicque was losing credit for his studies on chronaxie. Parisian neurophy...
Over the course of several decades at the Faculty of Medicine in Novi Sad, fundamental studies in th...
Adolf Beck, born in 1863 in Kraków (Poland), joined the Department of Physiology of the Jagiellonian...
Cette contribution explore le rôle institutionnel, scientifique et clinique de l'électroencéphalogra...
In 1593 in Genoa, the Magistrate, of hospitals for the incurable, decided to allocate two beds for a...
In 1593, the Magistrate of hospitals for the incurable in Genoa decided to allocate two beds for \u2...
I would like to thank Hermann J. Müller for providing valuable support, and for numerous inspiring r...
It has long been known that nervous activity is accompanied by changes of electrical potential. As ...
We of the American Electroencephalographic Society have been brought together, first, by our princip...
This paper commemorates the careers and the scientific influence of the clinical neurologists Kurt G...