Comparative Enzyme Histochemical Observations on Submammalian Brains [electronic resource] /

Comparative neurological studies of the evolutionary development of struc­ tures within the central nervous system of vertebrates have depended to a large extent upon morphological rather than functional criteria. Classical comparative anatomical studies, which have attempted to demonstrate homologies between parts of the brain in representatives of different vertebrate classes may be grouped under three general headings: 1. comparison of the embryological development of brain structures; 2. comparison in adult forms of the topographical relations of neuron groupings and fiber tracts, and of the morphology of cell types ( cyto­ architectonics); and 3. analysis and comparison of fiber connections between particular cell groupings or regions. Of these three, the third encompasses func­ tional relationships most directly, but even in well-defined fiber tracts the direction of conduction often remains indefinite, and the extent and activity of more diffuse systems is poorly known. In recent years a nurober of investigations applying electrophysiological and degeneration methods to submammalian forms have been reported. Those most pertinent to the present studies include the papers of . ARMSTRONG et al. (1953), KRUGERand associates (e. g. HERIC and KRUGER, 1966; KRUGERand BERKOWITZ, 1960; PowELL and KRUG ER, 1960}, GusEL'NIKov and SUPIN (1964) and KARA­ MYAN and BELEKJIOVA (1964) on various reptiles, and of PowELL and CowAN (1961), KARTEN and REVZIN (1966) and REVZIN and KARTEN (1967) on the pigeon.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Baker-Cohen, K. France. author., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 1968
Subjects:Medicine., Neurochemistry., Enzymology., Neurobiology., Biomedicine.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-85941-0
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id KOHA-OAI-TEST:180596
record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:1805962018-07-30T23:00:47ZComparative Enzyme Histochemical Observations on Submammalian Brains [electronic resource] / Baker-Cohen, K. France. author. SpringerLink (Online service) textBerlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer,1968.engComparative neurological studies of the evolutionary development of struc­ tures within the central nervous system of vertebrates have depended to a large extent upon morphological rather than functional criteria. Classical comparative anatomical studies, which have attempted to demonstrate homologies between parts of the brain in representatives of different vertebrate classes may be grouped under three general headings: 1. comparison of the embryological development of brain structures; 2. comparison in adult forms of the topographical relations of neuron groupings and fiber tracts, and of the morphology of cell types ( cyto­ architectonics); and 3. analysis and comparison of fiber connections between particular cell groupings or regions. Of these three, the third encompasses func­ tional relationships most directly, but even in well-defined fiber tracts the direction of conduction often remains indefinite, and the extent and activity of more diffuse systems is poorly known. In recent years a nurober of investigations applying electrophysiological and degeneration methods to submammalian forms have been reported. Those most pertinent to the present studies include the papers of . ARMSTRONG et al. (1953), KRUGERand associates (e. g. HERIC and KRUGER, 1966; KRUGERand BERKOWITZ, 1960; PowELL and KRUG ER, 1960}, GusEL'NIKov and SUPIN (1964) and KARA­ MYAN and BELEKJIOVA (1964) on various reptiles, and of PowELL and CowAN (1961), KARTEN and REVZIN (1966) and REVZIN and KARTEN (1967) on the pigeon.Comparative neurological studies of the evolutionary development of struc­ tures within the central nervous system of vertebrates have depended to a large extent upon morphological rather than functional criteria. Classical comparative anatomical studies, which have attempted to demonstrate homologies between parts of the brain in representatives of different vertebrate classes may be grouped under three general headings: 1. comparison of the embryological development of brain structures; 2. comparison in adult forms of the topographical relations of neuron groupings and fiber tracts, and of the morphology of cell types ( cyto­ architectonics); and 3. analysis and comparison of fiber connections between particular cell groupings or regions. Of these three, the third encompasses func­ tional relationships most directly, but even in well-defined fiber tracts the direction of conduction often remains indefinite, and the extent and activity of more diffuse systems is poorly known. In recent years a nurober of investigations applying electrophysiological and degeneration methods to submammalian forms have been reported. Those most pertinent to the present studies include the papers of . ARMSTRONG et al. (1953), KRUGERand associates (e. g. HERIC and KRUGER, 1966; KRUGERand BERKOWITZ, 1960; PowELL and KRUG ER, 1960}, GusEL'NIKov and SUPIN (1964) and KARA­ MYAN and BELEKJIOVA (1964) on various reptiles, and of PowELL and CowAN (1961), KARTEN and REVZIN (1966) and REVZIN and KARTEN (1967) on the pigeon.Medicine.Neurochemistry.Enzymology.Neurobiology.Biomedicine.Neurochemistry.Neurobiology.Enzymology.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-85941-0URN:ISBN:9783642859410
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Medicine.
Neurochemistry.
Enzymology.
Neurobiology.
Biomedicine.
Neurochemistry.
Neurobiology.
Enzymology.
Medicine.
Neurochemistry.
Enzymology.
Neurobiology.
Biomedicine.
Neurochemistry.
Neurobiology.
Enzymology.
spellingShingle Medicine.
Neurochemistry.
Enzymology.
Neurobiology.
Biomedicine.
Neurochemistry.
Neurobiology.
Enzymology.
Medicine.
Neurochemistry.
Enzymology.
Neurobiology.
Biomedicine.
Neurochemistry.
Neurobiology.
Enzymology.
Baker-Cohen, K. France. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Comparative Enzyme Histochemical Observations on Submammalian Brains [electronic resource] /
description Comparative neurological studies of the evolutionary development of struc­ tures within the central nervous system of vertebrates have depended to a large extent upon morphological rather than functional criteria. Classical comparative anatomical studies, which have attempted to demonstrate homologies between parts of the brain in representatives of different vertebrate classes may be grouped under three general headings: 1. comparison of the embryological development of brain structures; 2. comparison in adult forms of the topographical relations of neuron groupings and fiber tracts, and of the morphology of cell types ( cyto­ architectonics); and 3. analysis and comparison of fiber connections between particular cell groupings or regions. Of these three, the third encompasses func­ tional relationships most directly, but even in well-defined fiber tracts the direction of conduction often remains indefinite, and the extent and activity of more diffuse systems is poorly known. In recent years a nurober of investigations applying electrophysiological and degeneration methods to submammalian forms have been reported. Those most pertinent to the present studies include the papers of . ARMSTRONG et al. (1953), KRUGERand associates (e. g. HERIC and KRUGER, 1966; KRUGERand BERKOWITZ, 1960; PowELL and KRUG ER, 1960}, GusEL'NIKov and SUPIN (1964) and KARA­ MYAN and BELEKJIOVA (1964) on various reptiles, and of PowELL and CowAN (1961), KARTEN and REVZIN (1966) and REVZIN and KARTEN (1967) on the pigeon.
format Texto
topic_facet Medicine.
Neurochemistry.
Enzymology.
Neurobiology.
Biomedicine.
Neurochemistry.
Neurobiology.
Enzymology.
author Baker-Cohen, K. France. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Baker-Cohen, K. France. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Baker-Cohen, K. France. author.
title Comparative Enzyme Histochemical Observations on Submammalian Brains [electronic resource] /
title_short Comparative Enzyme Histochemical Observations on Submammalian Brains [electronic resource] /
title_full Comparative Enzyme Histochemical Observations on Submammalian Brains [electronic resource] /
title_fullStr Comparative Enzyme Histochemical Observations on Submammalian Brains [electronic resource] /
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Enzyme Histochemical Observations on Submammalian Brains [electronic resource] /
title_sort comparative enzyme histochemical observations on submammalian brains [electronic resource] /
publisher Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer,
publishDate 1968
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-85941-0
work_keys_str_mv AT bakercohenkfranceauthor comparativeenzymehistochemicalobservationsonsubmammalianbrainselectronicresource
AT springerlinkonlineservice comparativeenzymehistochemicalobservationsonsubmammalianbrainselectronicresource
_version_ 1756264707977641984