|
|
John Gach Books, Inc. 10514 Marriottsville Road (Rear Building) PO Box 267 Randallstown, Maryland 21133 |
|
Return to Gach Books home page
New Arrivals
Browse by Date of List
Search our online inventory
Inquire
OCLC locates only 1 copy, none in North America. Contains papers by Cerletti, Tanzi and Leonardo Bianchi (on the physiology & pathology of the frontal lobes).
Contains Hymie Anisman & Angelo Santi's "Behavioral Techniques in Pharmacological and Neuropharmacological Analysis"; Edward L. Bennett & Mark R. Rosenzweig's "Behavioral and Biochemcial Methods to Study Brain Responses to Environment and Experience"; Lahue's "Cell Fractionation"; Reinhard Rüchel et al's "Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoreses: Principles, Techniques, and Micromethods"; J. Voogd & H. K. P. Feirabend's "Classic Methods in Neuroanatomy"; Olle Lindvall et al's "Fluorescence Microscopy of Biogenic Monoamines"; G. Vrensen et al's "Electron Microscopy in Neurobiology"; Martin J. Hollenberg & Allan M. Erickson's "Scanning Electron Microscopy: Applications to Neurobiology"; H. J. Groenewegen et al's "Autoradiography in the Nervous System"; S. S. Oja & P. Kontro's "Isotope Methods."
Sections on perception, attention, memory, and emotion with papers presented from both the psychological and neurobiological points of view.
Lugaro was professor extraordinarius in Neuropathology and Psychiatry at the University of Modena, and later Professor of Psychiatry at Turin. Not a clinical work but a serious scientific attempt to found the study of psychological disorders on neurobiology and neuroanatomy by one of the significant secondary contributors to the neuron doctrine.In 1894 Lugaro gave a more exact description of inhibitory interneurons that possess two types of axonal plexi. First identified by Golgi, these subsequently became known as "Lugaro cells," discussed here on pages 84-88 with an accompanying plate. In 1906 he introduced the neuroscience concept of "plasticity," discussed here in neuropsychological terms on pages 94-100. So far as we can tell, this is the first discussion of neural plasticity in English.
University of Amsterdam doctoral thesis.
Contains George Wald's "Mechanism of Vision"; Hallowell Davis' "Mechanism of Hearing"; Yngve Zotterman's "Sensory Receptors."
Contains Henry B. Steinbach's "Ionic Problems"; George H. Bishop's "Excitability"; Chandler McC. Brooks & Michelangelo G. F. Fuortes' "Central Excitation and Inhibition"; Frank Brink, Jr.'s "Anesthetizing Actino"; J. Folch-Pi's "Metabolism."
A graduate of the Princeton class of 1886 with his MD from Columbia, Paton pioneered the teaching of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins Medical School and was largely responsible for the creation of the psychopathic hospital and department of psychiatry at Hopkins. In 1910 he settled in Princeton, lectured there in neurobiology, and served as a consultant for mental health for students—the first counseling program set up for college students. This is his attempt to explain human behavior mostly in neurobiological and evolutionary terms—primitive to be sure, but still a kind of incunable of behavioral neurology and evolutionary psychology.
Entirely devoted to the modeling of visual systems. Part I: The Biophysics of Information Transfer. Part II: The Organization of Computations in Visual Information Processing (contains David Marr's "Representing Visual Information").
Contains Drucker-Colín & Rojas-Ramírez's "New Appraches to the Study of the Neurochemical Basis of Sleep and Wakefulness"; Richard G. King's "Neural Bases for Circadian Rhythyms in Rodent Behavior"; Dwight M. Nance's "Sex Differences in the Hypothalamic Regulation of Feeding Behavior in the Rat"; M. Berry's "Plasticity in the Visual System and Visually Guided Behavior"; D. Dru & et's "CNS Recovery of Function: Serial Lesion Effects"; S. R. BUtler & A. Glass' "EEG Correlates of Cerebral Dominance"; Paul B. Farel's "Plasticity of a Monosynaptic Response in Isolated Frog Spinal Cord: Habituation and Persistent Potentiation"; Timothy J. Teyler's "Plasticity in the Hippocampus: A Model Systems Approach"; Philip M. Groves et al's "Habituation of the Acoustic Startle Response: A Neural Systems Analysis of Habituation in the Intact Animal"; Michael M. Patterson's "Mechanisms of Classical Conditioning and Fixation in Spinal Animals"; Alfred A. Buerger & S. F. Chopin's "Instrumental Avoidance Conditioning in Spinal Vertebrates."
Proceedings of a conference held at The Lankenau Hospital with sections onmorphology, biochemistry, physiology and pharmacology, pathophysiology.
Contains McKinley & Prusiner's "Biology and Structure of Scrapie Prions"; Thesleff's "Different Kinds of Acetylcholine Release from the Motor Nerve"; V. M. Dilman et al's "Neuroendocrine-Ontogenetic Mechanism of Aging: Toward an Integrated Theory of Aging"; Barbar J. Morley's "The Inerpeduncular Nucleus"; Ankier & Leonard's "Biological Aspects of Depression: A Review of the Etiology and Mechanisms of Action and Clinical Assessmetn of Antidepressants"; John N. Hawthorne's "Does Receptor-Linked Phosphoinositide Metabolism Provide Messengers Mobilizing Calcium in Nervous Tissue?" Atwood & Wojtowicz's "Short-Term and Long-Term Plasticity and Physiological Differentiation of Crustacean Motor Synapses"; Brimijoin & Rakonczay's "Immunoology and Molecular Biology of the Cholinesterases: Current Results and Prospects."
Contains Kenneth D. Roeder's "Insect Flight Behavior: Some Neurophysiological Indications of Its Control"; Vernon Rowland & Roy Anderson's "Brain Steady Potential Shifts"; James C. Smith's "Radiation: Its Detection and Its Effects on Taste Preference"; James T. Fitzsimons's "The Physiology of Thirst: A Review of the Extraneural Aspects of the Mechanisms of Drinking"; Jacques Le Magnen's "Advances in Studies on the Physiological Control and Regulation of Food Intake"; Alan N. Epstein's "The Lateral Hypothalamic Syndrome: Its Implications for the Physiological Psychology of Hunger and Thirst"; Philip Teitelbaum's "The Encephalization of Hunger."
Special double issue with a ISBN and also sold separately.
Contains papers by Tasaki, Hodgkin, Lorente de Nó, Eccles, Bullock, et al.
Watson was professor of physiology in the University of Edinburgh Medical School.
A revised version of the author's 1961 doctoral dissertation, from 1964 issued by Duke University Press.
Contains R. Bruce Holman et al's "Perspectives in Behavioural Neurochemistry"; Michael R. Boarder's "The Mode of Action of Indolamine and Other Hallucinogens"; H. Frank Woods & Moussa B. H. Youdim's "The Isolated Perfused Rat Brain Preparation - A Critical Assessment"; Frederick K. Goodwin et al's "Clinical Approaches to the Evaluation of Brain Amine Function in Mental Illness: Some Conceptual Issues"; Kenneth G. Waltopn's "Cyclic N ucleotides and Postsynaptic Events"; Michael S. Starr's "Prospective Neurotransmitters in Vertebrate Retina."
Return to Gach Books home page
New Arrivals
Browse by Date of List
Search our online inventory