Mind, Brain, Body, and Behavior

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
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

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