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Section 2: Neuroscience in German (F-K)
Section 3: Neuroscience in German (L-R)
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Schacherl was Privatdozent der Neuroluesstation am Kaiser Frank Joseph-Spital in Wien.
OCLC locates 7 copies: NY State Lib, UCLA, Berkeley, Yale, Chicago, Michigan, Minnesota.
Gross was Primarius and Kaltenbäck Oberärztin in the Psychiatrischen Krankenhaus der Stadt Wien.
Schröder was Professor of Psychiatry and Neurology in Greifswald.
Osier & Wozniak #1812. An important journal with papers by von Monakow, Robert Bing, Eugen Bleuler, Eugene Minkowski, Paul Dubois, and other mostly Swiss luminaries. Papers in German and French.
Hard to believe, but not in OCLC or NLM. Sepp was professor at the University of Moscow.
Shimazono was professor at the first medical clinic of Tokyo University. Includes 18 papers (16 in German and two in English) on beri-beri (6), epilepsy (1), the spine & peripheral nervous system, the bird cerebellum, etc.
At the time Spiegel was Privatdozent at the University of Vienna; after emigrating to the United States in the 1930s he became Professor of Experimental Neurology at Temple University in Philadelphia.
Called by Kraepelin to Munich to become Alzheimer's successor in the Anatomical laboratory. "In 1922 appeared his superbly illustrated Histopathologie des Nervensystems, the first textbook on general histopathology. Special histopathology was represented by his carefully documented chapters on microscopic changes in the psychoses" [Haymaker & Schiller Founders of Neurology, p. 377].
Spielmeyer was a Munich neuropsychiatrist at the anatomical laboratory of the psychiatric clinic; his 1922 Histopathologie des Nervensystems was the first textbook of general neurohistopathology (see Haymaker & Schiller p. 377).
- GM 550: "One of the greatest text-books on histology." Contains, besides Stricker's important essays on general histology, the following papers of particular neurological interest: Max Schultze "Allgemeines über die Structurelemente des Nervensystems" and "Die Retina"
- W. Kühne "Nerv- und Muskelfaser"
- E. Brücke "Muskelfasern im polarisirten Lichte"
- J. Gerlach "Von dem Rückenmark"
- Theodor Meyer "Vom Gehirne der Sägethiere"
- Sigmund Mayer "Das sympathetische Nervensystem"
- Th. W. Engelmann "Die Geschmacksorgane"
- "Das Gehörorgan" by J. Kessel and Rüdinger; W. Waldeyer " Hörnerv und Schnecke."
OCLC locates 8 copies.
Contains W. Trendlenburg "Das zentrale Nervensystem der warmblütigen Tiere" and J[ulius] Steiner "Das zentrale Nervensystem der kaltblütigen Wirbeltiere."
OCLC locate copies only at Countway, Phila Coll of Physicians, Univ Cal Irvine, and one in Germany. Tilmann was director of the University of Cologne's surgical clinic.
OCLC records only the Wellcome copy.
Verworn's final and master work on excitation and arrest of movement in living organisms, based on his decades-long laboratory research in physiology and neurophysiology.
An essay on the basis of scientific knowledge, discussing the relation of experimentation, perception, and theory, very much based on and referring to Verworn's neural work. Originally delivered as a lecture 29 February 1908 to the Senckebergische Naturforschende Gesellschaft in Frankfurt am Main. At the time Professor of Physiology and Director of the Physiological Institute in Göttingen, Verworn did important work on neural functioning.
No copy recorded in OCLC.
All published in the series.
GM 607. "Wagner was professor at Göttingen. His literary output was enormous. In the above work he contributed the sections on sympathetic nerves, nerve-ganglia, and nerve-endings. This work contained 63 extensive review articles from 30 authors" [GM].Contains E. H. Weber's Der Tastsinn und das Gemeingefühl (Band 3, 2. Abt., pp. 481-588), GM 1459, one of the great papers in the history of psychology & the foundation for all subsequent work on the sense of touch as well as somesthetic sensibility. Also contains contributions by Lotze (on vision), A. W. Volkmann (vision), F. W. Hagen (psychology & psychiatry), & J. E. Purkinje (on sleep, dreams, and waking states). Hagen's, Volkmann's & Purkinje's papers are all cited by Freud in Die Traumdeutung (Strachey's Bibliography A).
OCLC locates only one copy, at Ohio State. A German veterinarian, Walter self-published in 1912 Kerne des Hirnstammes vom Kaninchen, medulla oblongata und corpus trapezoides.
Habilitated in 1895 at the Obstetric-gynecologic clinic in Bern, where he was made professor in 1903. In 1914 he became professor ordinarius at Frankfurt, then in 1920 at Zurich, where he also directed the Women's Clinic. He identified "Walthard's islets," microscopic inclusions of the germinal epithelium of the ovary, found either in contact with the serosal covering or just below it, which are implicated in the development of Brenner tumors.
Wenderowic headed and Sokolansky worked in Neuro-histologisches Laboratorium der Klinik für Nervenkrankheiten des I. Leningrader Medizinischen Instituts.
Hirsch 20016. The definitive early work.
Thesis taken under Puusepp. OCLC locates copies only at Oxford and LC.
Previously Professor of Neurology and Psychiatry at the University of Utrecht, Winkler was now Professor of Neurology at the Municipal University of Amsterdam. His Handboek der Neurologie (1918-1933) was the first important Dutch textbook of neurology.
A standard book by one of the great German physiologists, with sections on the CNS and peripheral nervous system. See GM-5 #656 for his 1910-25 Handbuch der vergleichenden Physiologie.
OCLC records 7 copies: UCLA, LC, NLM, Wellcom, Universities of South Florida, Michigan, & Minnesota.
Osier & Wozniak #282 & 432. Originally edited by Alzheimer, Lewandowsky, and Spielmeyer. From Band 25 (1921) retitled Zentralblatt für die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie Referatenteil with the editors being Kurt Mendel, Spielmeyer, Robert Hirschfeld, and E. Mendel. Absorbed the Neurologische Centralblatt in 1921. Abstracts virtually the entire central European psychiatric literature. Issued as a supplement to the main journal.
Osier & Wozniak #281. Originally edited by Alzheimer & Lewandowsky, later edited by Robert Gaupp, Karl Willmanns, Otfried Förster, Hugo Liepmann, Felix Plaut, Walther Spielmayer, and Oswald Bumke.A centrally important journal for 20th century German psychiatry. Contains Festschriften for Arnold Pick (76 Heft 1/2); Eugen Bleuler (82); Robert Sommer (94 Heft 2/3); L. Minor (94 Heft 4); Bechterew (100 Heft 1); Kraepelin (101); Paul Schuster (110 Heft 2); Gaupp (127 Heft 4/5); Weygandt (128 Heft 1/4); Gustav Specht (131 Heft 1/3).
Without the II. Teil with the continuation of Mikroskopische Anatomie des Gehirns. Issued in a total of six Lieferungen from 1899 to 1934, one rarely sees all the parts together (we've never had a complete set).An encyclopedic neuranatomic reference work. Ziehen and the co-workers in his laboratory produced much work of fundamental importance.
Entirely devoted to the microscopic anatomy of the human brain with sections on the metencephalon (Nachhirn), hindbrain (Hinterhirn), the pons (Brücke), and the cerebellum (Kleinhirn). The first volume, published 1899-1903, was largely devoted to macroscopic anatomy. The two volumes were originally issued in a six Lieferungen from 1899 to 1934 (we've never had it in original parts).Section 1: Neuroscience in German (A-E)The completion of Ziehen's encyclopedic survey of brain anatomy, published over 35 years. Ziehen and the co-workers in his various laboratories produced much work of fundamental importance. Ziehen himself, who received his MD from the University of Berlin in 1885, is a complex and hard-to-pigeonhole figure. He may be the only writer of his time who made noteworthy contributions to neuroscience, psychology, psychiatry, pedagogy, and philosophy. He was at Jena from 1900-1903; Utrecht 1903-4; Halle 1904-12; and Berlin 1917-1930. The University of Berlin awarded him an honorary PhD in 1910.
Section 2: Neuroscience in German (F-K)
Section 3: Neuroscience in German (L-R)
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