Mind, Brain, Body, and Behavior

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

64 FARRERAS



  1. Ibid. “The NIH Clinical Center was designed in the form of a Lorraine
    cross: one long axis cut by two shorter axes. Patients, clinical staff, and
    clinical researchers were located in the center of each floor. Basic science
    laboratories were located on the ends of the long axis and in the cross-cutting
    corridors. The design represented the philosophy of the facility to transfer
    new biomedical knowledge as rapidly as possible from the laboratory to the
    patient’s bedside. That philosophy has never changed.” (Victoria A. Harden,
    “A Short History of NIH,” http://www.pitt.edu/~super1/lecture/lec13111/
    index.htm).

  2. See Cohen’s chapter, this volume, Richard Littmann’s paper on the branch
    on the ONH website, and the Child Research Branch review for further
    information and Appendices B and C for lists of all branch members and
    selected landmark papers.

  3. See the Laboratory of Psychology review for further information and
    Appendices B and C for lists of all laboratory members and selected
    landmark papers.

  4. See Kopin’s chapter, this volume, and the Laboratory of Clinical Science
    review for further information and Appendices B and C for lists of all
    laboratory members and selected landmark papers.

  5. See Elkes’s chapter, this volume, and the Clinical Neuropharmacology
    Research Center review for further information and Appendices B and C
    for lists of all laboratory members and selected landmark papers.

  6. See Hamburg’s chapter, this volume, and the Adult Psychiatry Branch review
    for further information and Appendices B and C for lists of all laboratory
    members and selected landmark papers.

  7. Cohen, NIMH Annual Report, 1958.

  8. Cohen, NIMH Annual Report, 1959.

  9. Cohen, oral history by Farreras, January 23, 2002.

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