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Material addressing the history of nerve physiology
Material addressing the history of nerve physiology
Contains
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Material addressing the history of nerve physiology
Contains
Borck, C. 'Electricity as a Medium of Psychic Life: Electrotechnical adventures into psychodiagnosis in Weimar Germany', Science in Context 14 (4) (2001), pp. 565-590.
D. Wegener, 'Science and Internationalism in Germany: Helmholtz, Du Bois-Reymond and Their Critics', Centaurus 51 (4) (2009), pp. 256-287.
F. Clarac and J-G. Barbara, 'The emergence of the “motoneuron concept”: From the early 19th C to the beginning of the 20th C', Brain Research 1409 (29 Aug 2011), pp. 23-41.
H. Schmidgen, 'Physics, Ballistics, and Psychology: A history of the chronoscope in/as context, 1845-1890', History of Psychology 8 (1) (2005), pp. 46-78.
H. Schmidgen, 'The Donders Machine: Matter, Signs, and Time in a Physiological Experiment, ca. 1865', Configurations 13 (2) (2005), pp. 211-256.
J. Crary, Suspensions of Perception: Attention, Spectacle, and Modern Culture (Cambridge, MA. and London: MIT Press, 1999).
J. Garson, 'The Birth of Information in the Brain: Edgar Adrian and the Vacuum Tube', Science in Context 28 (1) (2015), pp. 31-52.
Jean-Gaël Barbara, 'The Physiological Construction of the Neurone Concept (1891–1952)', Comptes Rendus Biologies 329 (5-6) (2006), pp. 437-449.
L.E. Kay, 'From Logical Neurons to Poetic Embodiments of Mind: Warren S. McCulloch’s Project in Neuroscience', Science in Context 14 (4), pp. 591-614.
Meredith Bak, 'Democracy and discipline: Object lessons and the stereoscope in American education, 1870-1920', Early Popular Visual Culture 10 (2) (2012), pp. 147-167.
Micheal Finn, 'The West Riding Lunatic Asylum and the making of the modern brain sciences in the nineteenth century', University of Leeds PhD thesis (2012).
P. Coulliard et. al., 'Herbert Spencer's influence on the genesis of Sherrington's concept of the intergrative action of the nervous system', Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 2 (2) (1985), pp. 205-219.
R. Smith, 'Biology and Values in Interwar Britain: C.S. Sherrington, Julian Huxley, and the Vision of Progress', Past & Present 178 (2003), pp. 210-242.
R.D. French, 'Some Concepts of Nerve Function and Structure in Britain, 1870-1885: Background to Sir Charles Sherrington and the Synapse Concept', Medical History 14 (2) (1970), pp. 154-165.
R.M. Brain and M.N. Wise, 'Muscles and Engines: Indicator Diagrams and Helmholtz’s Graphical Methods', in L. Krüger, Universalgenie Helmholtz. Rückblick nach 100 Jahren (Berlin, 1994), pp. 124-148.
R.M. Brain, 'Representation on the Line: Graphic recording instruments and scientific modernism', in D. Clarke and D. Henderson (eds.) From Energy to Information (Stanford, University Press, 2002), pp. 155-177.
R.M. Brain, 'The pulse of modernism: experimental physiology and aesthetic avant-gardes circa 1900', Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 39 (3), (2008), pp. 393–417.
T. Borck, 'Writing brains: tracing the psyche with the graphical method', History of Psychology 8 (1) (2005), pp. 79-94.
T. Quick, 'From Phrenology to the Laboratory: Physiological Psychology and the Institution of Science in Britain (c.1830–80)', History of the Human Sciences 27 (5) (2014), pp. 54-73.
T.H. Abraham, 'Integrating mind and brain: Warren S. McCulloch, cerebral localization, and experimental epistemology', Endeavour 27 (1) (2003), pp. 32-36.
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