Mind, Brain, Body, and Behavior

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

244 GUTH



  1. Hans Spemann, Embryonic Development and Induction (New Haven,
    Connecticut: Yale University Press, 1938).

  2. Paul Weiss, Principles of Development (New York: Henry Holt, 1939).

  3. Windle had been recruited by Kety. Since both of them had been at the
    University of Pennsylvania, Kety was undoubtedly familiar with Windle’s
    very distinguished scientific reputation. Windle had been honored for his
    work on spinal cord regeneration by an invitation, in 1945, to lecture before
    the Harvey Society in New York City.

  4. The Commissioned Corps was especially attractive to those who held
    M.D.s, in part because enlistment in the PHS fulfilled requirements for
    service in the physician’s draft. Enlistment in the Commissioned Corps
    was also attractive to some Ph.D.s (especially those who had served in the
    armed forces during the Second World War), because retirement and
    promotion credits earned in military service were transferable to the Com­
    missioned Corps.

  5. My later research on muscle fiber plasticity overlapped to some degree with
    a program on muscle fiber histochemistry in the NIH’s Medical Neurology
    Branch. I always considered this as beneficial rather than wasteful: when
    two scientists work independently on a similar question, science benefits
    from the divergent results obtained by use of different techniques, different
    experimental approaches, and different interpretations.

  6. H. Koenig, R. A. Groat, and William F. Windle, “A Physiological Approach
    to Perfusion-Fixation of Tissues With Formalin,” Stain Technology 20
    (1945): 13-22.

  7. Harold A. Davenport, Histological and Histochemical Technics (Philadelphia:
    W. B. Saunders, 1945).

  8. Ralph D. Lillie, Histopathological Technique and Practical Histochemistry, 3rd
    ed. (New York: McGraw Hill, 1965).

  9. Sanford L. Palay, “Synapses in the Central Nervous System,” Journal of Bio­
    physical and Biochemical Cytology Suppl. no. 2 (1956): 193-201 and Sanford
    L. Palay, “The Morphology of Synapses in the Central Nervous System,”
    Experimental Cell Research Suppl. no. 5 (1958): 275-93.

  10. Alan Peters, Sanford L. Palay and Henry Webster, The Fine Structure of the
    Nervous System, 1st ed. (New York: Harper & Row, 1970).

  11. Lloyd Guth, “Regeneration in the Mammalian Peripheral Nervous System,”
    Physiological Review 36 (1956): 441-78.

  12. Jane Overton, “Mitotic Stimulation of Amphibian Epidermis by Underlying
    Grafts of Central Nervous Tissue,” Journal of Experimental Biology 155 (1950):
    521-59 and Jane Overton, “Mitotic Responses in Amphibian Epidermis to
    Feeding and Grafting,” Journal of Experimental Zoology 130 (1955): 433-83.

  13. Lloyd Guth and Karl Frank, “Restoration of Diaphragmatic Function
    Following Vagophrenic Anastomosis in the Rat,” Experimental Neurology 1
    (1959): 1-12.

  14. Paul O. Chatfield, Fundamentals of Clinical Neurophysiology (Springfield,
    Illinois: Charles C. Thomas, 1957).

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