Index Of Nobel Laureates In Medicine ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE. Name,Year Awarded. Sharp, Phillip A. 1993. sherrington, sir charles scott, 1932. http://almaz.com/nobel/medicine/alpha.html
Medicine 1932 The nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1932. for their discoveries regardingthe functions of neurons . sir charles scott sherrington, Edgar Douglas Adrian. http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1932/
Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott sherrington, sir charles scott. sir charles sherrington. of integrated nervous functionin higher animals and brought him (with Edgar Adrian) the nobel Prize for http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/542_91.html
Extractions: Sir Charles Sherrington Corbis-Bettmann (b. Nov. 27, 1857, London, Eng.d. March 4, 1952, Eastbourne, Sussex), English physiologist whose 50 years of experimentation laid the foundations for an understanding of integrated nervous function in higher animals and brought him (with Edgar Adrian ) the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1932. Sherrington was educated at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge (B.A. 1883); at St. Thomas' Hospital Medical School, where he qualified in medicine in 1885; and at the University of Berlin, where he worked with Rudolf Virchow and Robert Koch. After serving as a lecturer at St. Thomas' Hospital, he was successively a professor at the universities of London (1891-95), Liverpool (1895-1913), and Oxford (1913-35). He was made a fellow of the Royal Society in 1893 and served as its president from 1920 to 1925. He was knighted in 1922. Working with cats, dogs, monkeys, and apes that had been deprived of their cerebral hemispheres, Sherrington found that reflexes must be regarded as integrated activities of the total organism, not as the result of the activities of isolated "reflex arcs," a notion that was currently accepted. The first major piece of evidence supporting "total integration" was his demonstration (1895-98) of the "reciprocal innervation" of muscles, also known as Sherrington's law: when one set of muscles is stimulated, muscles opposing the action of the first are simultaneously inhibited.
Sir Charles Scott Sherrington (www.whonamedit.com) In 1932 sir charles scott sherrington shared the nobel Prise in Physiologyor Medicine with Edgar Douglas Adrian, 1st Baron Adrian (18891977). http://www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/2266.html
Extractions: Sir Charles Scott Sherrington's research, spanning more than 50 years, laid the foundations for modern neurophysiology. He maintained that the most important function of the nervous system in higher animals is the coordination of the various parts of the organism. Although best known for his long series of studies on spinal reflexes, he made equally great strides in the physiology of perception, reaction, and behaviour. He was the first to adequately study the synapse and originated the term. He also introduced the term exterioceptor, proprioceptor and viscerocepter. In 1932 he shared the Nobel Prise in Physiology or Medicine with Edgar Douglas Adrian. Sherrington was the son of Anne Brookes and James Norton Sherrington, of Caister, Great Yarmouth, a country physician who died when he was quite young. His mother married Caleb Rose, Jr., of Ipswich, a physician of wide cultural interests and a noted archaeologist. The Rose home, a gathering place for artists and scholars, helped to shape Sherrington's broad interest in science, philosophy, history, and poetry. One of his schoolmasters, Thomas Ashe, was a poet of considerable distinction.
Magdalen > History > Nobel Laureats > Sir Charles Sherrington sir charles sherrington OM, GB, FRS. charles scott sherrington was born in November1857 and was educated sherrington lived to an immense age and dedicated his http://www.magd.ox.ac.uk/history/nobel_sherrington.shtml
Extractions: Charles Scott Sherrington was born in November 1857 and was educated at Caius College, Cambridge where he was awarded a Fellowship in 1887. He was Professor of Physiology at the University of Liverpool between 1895 and 1913 when he came to Magdalen College as Waynflete Professor of Physiology. He was President of the Royal Society between 1920 and 1925. Sherrington lived to an immense age and dedicated his life to the study of the nervous system. His ideas published in 1904 as 'The Integrative Action of the Nervous System' put the field onto a new plane with the realisation that the unit reaction of the nevous system was the simple spinal reflex. The role of the nervous system was to correlate the individual activities of all the cells of the body from which a new entity results - the animal itself. Over the next forty years he went on to publish over 200 papers, nearly all of primary importance. His Gifford Lectures of 1937-8 were published as 'Man and his Nature' and resulted from his researches into the philosophy and science of the 16th and 17th centuries. But his interests went far beyond the study of the nervous system; he undertook research in bacteriology, the metablism of the body in cancer, histology, the formation of scar tissue. He was appointed by the Royal Society a member of the commission to study Asiatic Cholera in Spain in 1886 and was a member of the Society's Malaria and Sleeping Sickness Commission. He served on a number of government committees including those on the lighting of factories, tetanus, alcohol, industrial fatigue, foot and mouth disease. He was awarded his
Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott img6857 picture, sherrington, sir charles scott of London (192025), Knight GrandCross of the British Empire (1922), Order of Merit (1924), nobel Prize (1932). http://vlp.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/people/data/per141.html
Extractions: Degrees: M.B., University of Cambridge, 1885 Career: 1875 medical training at St. Thomas's Hospital in London; 1879 studies of medicine at Caius College, Cambridge under M. Foster and at St. Thomas's Hospital; 1885 BM; 1886 licentiate Royal College of Physicians; 1885-1887 graduate study and research in Europe under Friedrich, Rudolph Virchow and Robert Koch ; 1887 Dr. med. from the University of Berlin; 1887 fellow at Gonville and Caius College and at the same time lecturer in systematic physiology at St. Thomas's; 1891-95 physician-superintendent of the Brown Institution, a London animal hospital; 1892 MD; 1895-1912 Holt professorship of physiology at Liverpool; 1913-1935 Wayneflete chair of physiology at Oxford; work in many scientific organizations and after his retirement from Oxford also lecturing and writing; president of the Royal Society of London (1920-25), Knight Grand Cross of the British Empire (1922), Order of Merit (1924), Nobel Prize (1932). Selected works: - Sherrington, Charles Scott. 1898. Decerebrate Rigidity, and Reflex Co-ordination of Movements. Journal of Physiology 22: 319-332
Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott sherrington, sir charles scott, 18571952, English neurophysiologist, educatedat Cambridge knighted in 1922 and with ED Adrian shared the 1932 nobel Prize in http://www.infoplease.com/cgi-bin/id/A0844881
Extractions: Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott, , English neurophysiologist, educated at Cambridge. He was professor of physiology at the universities of Liverpool and London and at Oxford. He contributed major concepts in his field, among them that of proprioception, that of the function of the synapse (a term he introduced), and the process described in his Integrative Action of the Nervous System (1906, 2d ed. 1948). As a physician, he did important work in the study of cholera and of diphtheria and tetanus antitoxins, and played an important role in the improvement of health and safety conditions in British factories during World War I. He was knighted in 1922 and with E. D. Adrian shared the 1932 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their discoveries regarding the function of the neuron. Among his other works are Mammalian Physiology (1919, rev. ed. 1929)
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Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott sherrington, sir charles scott. conditions in British factories during World WarI. He was knighted in 1922 and with ED Adrian shared the 1932 nobel Prize in http://www.slider.com/enc/48000/Sherrington_Sir_Charles_Scott.htm
Extractions: Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott 1857-1952, English neurophysiologist, educated at Cambridge. He was professor of physiology at the universities of Liverpool and London and at Oxford. He contributed major concepts in his field, among them that of proprioception, that of the function of the synapse (a term he introduced), and the process described in his Integrative Action of the Nervous System (1906, 2d ed. 1948). As a physician, he did important work in the study of cholera and of diphtheria and tetanus antitoxins, and played an important role in the improvement of health and safety conditions in British factories during World War I. He was knighted in 1922 and with E. D. Adrian shared the 1932 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their discoveries regarding the function of the neuron. Among his other works are Mammalian Physiology (1919, rev. ed. 1929), The Brain and Its Mechanism (1933), and Man on His Nature (1940, 2d ed. 1952). He was also known as a philosopher and poet.
Premios Nobel De Medicina Premios nobel de Medicina. Año, Tema, Ganador. 1932, Adrian, Lord EdgarDouglas; sherrington, sir charles scott. 1933, Morgan, Thomas Hunt. http://fai.unne.edu.ar/biologia/nobeles/nobelmed.htm
Extractions: Premios Nobel de Medicina Tema Ganador Behring, Emil Adolf Von Ross, Sir Ronald Finsen, Niels Ryberg Pavlov, Ivan Petrovich Koch, Robert Cajal, Santiago Ramon Y.; Golgi, Camillo Laveran, Charles Louis Alphonse Ehrlich, Paul; Metchnikoff, Ilya Ilyich Kocher, Emil Theodor Kossel, Albrecht Gullstrand, Allvar Carrel, Alexis Richet, Charles Robert Barany, Robert Bordet, Jules Krogh, Schack August Steenberger Hill, Sir Archibald Vivian; Meyerhof, Otto Fritz; Banting, Sir Frederick Grant; Macleod, John James Richard; Einthoven, Willem; Fibiger, Johannes Andreas Grib Wagner-Jauregg, Julius Nicolle, Charles Jules Henri Eijkman, Christiaan; Hopkins, Sir Frederick Gowland Landsteiner, Karl Warburg, Otto Heinrich Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas; Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott Morgan, Thomas Hunt Minot, George Richards; Murphy, William Parry; Whipple, George Hoyt Spemann, Hans Dale, Sir Henry Hallett; Loewi, Otto Nagyrapolt, Albert Szent-Gyorgyi Von Heymans, Corneille Jean Francois Domagk, Gerhard Dam, Henrik Carl Peter; Doisy, Edward Adelbert Erlanger, Joseph; Gasser, Herbert Spencer
Charles Scott Sherrington Translate this page sir charles scott sherrington Biography, nobel e-Museum, http//www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1932/sherrington-bio.html. http://www.historiadelamedicina.org/sherrington.html
Extractions: Sherrington fue " Demostrador " de Anatomía en Cambridge con el profesor George Humphrey en 1883 y, durante el curso 1883-1884, lo fue de histología en el St Thomas Hospita l. Lecturer in Physiology en el St Thomas Hospital Th. Brown Institution del University Collage En 1897 explicó la coordinación de los reflejos espinales inhibidores y excitomotores y su "inervación recíproca". En 1904 acuñó el concepto de vía común para referirse a la coordinación de las funciones nerviosas. Dos años más tarde diferenció los receptores profundos (propioceptores), de los receptores superficiales de la piel. Todo ello le llevó a elaborar la obra The integrative action of the nervous system Silliman Lectures
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY Zsigmondy, Richard Adolf, 1925. ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES INPHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE. Name, Year Awarded. sherrington, sir charles scott, 1932. http://www.bioscience.org/urllists/nobelc.htm
Extractions: ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY Name Year Awarded Alder, Kurt Altman, Sidney Anfinsen, Christian B. Arrhenius, Svante August ... Zsigmondy, Richard Adolf ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE Name Year Awarded Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas Arber, Werner Axelrod, Julius Baltimore, David ... Zinkernagel, Rolf M. Source: The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Nobel Prize - Neuroscience nobel Prize Neuroscience, sherrington, charles scott, sir, 11/27/1857to 3/4/1952, British, Function of neurons in the brain and spinal cord. http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/nobel.html
Extractions: Nobel Prize - Neuroscience Year of Award Name(s) Birth and Death Dates Nationality/Citizenship Field of Study Golgi, Camillo 7/7/1843 to 1/21/1926 Italian Structure of the Nervous System Ramon y Cajal, Santiago 5/1/1852 to 10/18/1934 Spanish Structure of the Nervous System Gullstrand, Allvar 6/5/1862 to 7/28/1930 Swedish Optics of the Eye Barany, Robert 5/22/1876 to 4/8/1936 Austrian Physiology and pathology of the vestibular apparatus Wagner-Jauregg, Julius 3/7/1857 to 9/27/1940 Austrian Discovery of Malaria inoculation to treat dementia paralytica Adrian, Edgar Douglas 11/30/1889 to 8/4/1977 British Function of neurons in sending messages Sherrington, Charles Scott, Sir 11/27/1857 to 3/4/1952 British Function of neurons in the brain and spinal cord Dale, Henry Hallett, Sir 6/9/1875 to 7/23/1968 British Chemical transmission of nerve impulses Loewi, Otto 6/3/1875 to 12/25/1961 German, American Citizen Chemical transmission of nerve impulses Erlanger, Joseph 1/5/1874 to 12/15/1965 American Differentiated functions of single nerve fibers Gasser, Herbert Spencer
1900-1909 By Kenneth L. Tyler, MD sir charles scott sherrington shown as a young man was a preeminent neurophysiologistof the first decade of the sherrington received the nobel Prize in http://www.aneuroa.org/html/c20html/1900_1909.htm
Extractions: The first decade of the 20th Century (1900-1909) saw dramatic changes and advances in virtually every aspect of neurology. The basic science framework for neurology was solidified by fundamental advances in neurophysiology, led by Sir Charles Sherrington and his collaborators. Sir Charles Scott Sherrington Sir Charles Scott Sherrington shown as a young man was a pre-eminent neurophysiologist of the first decade of the 20th Century. The Integrative Action of the Nervous System , published in 1906, was a landmark in the history of science. Sherrington received the Nobel Prize in 1932 for physiology. Equally important advances were made in the study of the histology and pathology of the nervous system by Ramon y Cajal and others. Santiago Ramón y Cajal (1852-1934) This photograph of Santiago Ramón y Cajal was taken in 1899 at the time of his visit to the United States to lecture a the Decennial Celebration of Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts. Cajal shared the Nobel Prize in 1906 with Golgi for his work on the structure of the nervous system. He was instrumental in providing clear histological proof that nerve cells were discrete cellular units whose processes were interconnected at synapses ("neuron doctrine") rather than through a continuous reticular net. Cajal's illustration of the giant pyramidal cells (A,B) from the motor cortex of a 20 day old infant shown here are from his lecture at Clark University in 1899.
NASA Neurolab Web: Mission Home Page King George V in 1922, he was awarded a conobel Laureate in though never an abidingone; a shifting harmony of subpatterns. sir charles scott sherrington. http://neurolab.jsc.nasa.gov/sherring.htm
Extractions: "It is as if the Milky Way entered upon some cosmic dance. Swiftly the brain becomes an enchanted loom, where millions of flashing shuttles weave a dissolving pattern, always a meaningful pattern though never an abiding one; a shifting harmony of subpatterns." Sir Charles Scott Sherrington Curator: Julie Heath and Jacque Havelka
Nobel Prize In Physiology Or Medicine - Wikipedia Source http//www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/index.html. Karl Landsteiner 1931Otto Heinrich Warburg 1932 sir charles scott sherrington, Edgar Douglas http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize/Physiology_or_medicine
Extractions: Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Page history Special pages Set my user preferences My watchlist Recently updated pages Upload image files Image list Registered users Site statistics Random article Orphaned articles Orphaned images Popular articles Most wanted articles Short articles Long articles Newly created articles Interlanguage links All pages by title Blocked IP addresses Maintenance page External book sources Printable version Talk Other languages: Deutsch Dansk Nederlands Polski (Redirected from Nobel Prize/Physiology or medicine Emil Adolf von Behring Ronald Ross Niels Ryberg Finsen ... Christiaan Eijkman , Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins Karl Landsteiner Otto Heinrich Warburg Sir Charles Scott Sherrington Edgar Douglas Adrian Thomas Hunt Morgan George Hoyt Whipple ... Hans Spemann Sir Henry Hallett Dale Otto Loewi Albert von Szent-Györgyi Nagyrapolt Corneille Jean François Heymans ... Herbert Spencer Gasser Sir Alexander Fleming Ernst Boris Chain , Sir Howard Walter Florey Hermann Joseph Muller Carl Ferdinand Cori Gerty Theresa , née Radnitz Cori, Bernardo Alberto Houssay Paul Hermann Müller Walter Rudolf Hess Antonio Caetano De Abreu Freire Egas Moniz ... Dickinson W. Richards
Extractions: Nobel Prize in Medicine since 1901 Year Prize Winners Behring, Emil Adolf Von Ross, Sir Ronald Finsen, Niels Ryberg Pavlov, Ivan Petrovich Koch, Robert Cajal, Santiago Ramon Y.; Golgi, Camillo Laveran, Charles Louis Alphonse Ehrlich, Paul; Mechnikov, Ilya Ilyich Kocher, Emil Theodor Kossel, Albrecht Gullstrand, Allvar Carrel, Alexis Richet, Charles Robert Barany, Robert Bordet, Jules Krogh, Schack August Steenberger Hill, Sir Archibald Vivian; Meyerhof, Otto Fritz; Banting, Sir Frederick Grant; Macleod, John James Richard; Einthoven, Willem; Fibiger, Johannes Andreas Grib Wagner-Jauregg, Julius Nicolle, Charles Jules Henri Eijkman, Christiaan; Hopkins, Sir Frederick Gowland Landsteiner, Karl Warburg, Otto Heinrich Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas; Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott Morgan, Thomas Hunt Minot, George Richards; Murphy, William Parry; Whipple, George Hoyt Spemann, Hans Dale, Sir Henry Hallett; Loewi, Otto Nagyrapolt, Albert Szent-Gyorgyi Von Heymans, Corneille Jean Francois Domagk, Gerhard Dam, Henrik Carl Peter; Doisy, Edward Adelbert Erlanger, Joseph; Gasser, Herbert Spencer