COHEN 195
the comprehensive delineation of the psychological
features of schizophrenia
(David Shakow)
advances in systematic process and outcome
psychotherapy research
(Morris B. Parloff )
the primary role of thyroxin in protein synthesis as
revealed by mental retardation in cretinism
(Louis Sokoloff )
the crucial involvement of brain catecholamines in
the manifestations of affective disorders
(Joseph Schildkraut et al. and William Bunney et al.)
psychoactive tryptamine derivatives
(Stephen Szara)
Three important reports presented at the monthly NIH Clinico
pathological Case conferences also emerged from this first decade of
research and were published in the Annals of Internal Medicine:
- The Metabolism of the Catecholamines: Clinical Implications
(Robert A. Cohen, William Bridgers, Julius Axelrod, Hans
Weil-Malherbe, Elwood LaBrosse, William Bunney, Philippe V.
Cardon, and Seymour S. Kety)^18 - Some Clinical, Biochemical and Physiological Actions of the
Pineal Gland
(Robert A. Cohen, Richard Wurtman, Julius Axelrod,
Solomon Snyder)^19 - False Neurochemical Transmitters
(Robert A. Cohen, Irwin Kopin, Cyrus Creveling, José Musacchio,
Josef Fischer, J. Richard Crout, John Gill)^20
When Kety stepped down as scientific director of the joint NIMH
NINDB basic research program to head the Laboratory of Clinical