Mind, Brain, Body, and Behavior

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

294 SIDMAN



  1. Grobstein, like so many NIH scientists of that era, later went out to
    create modern medical academia. He went first to Stanford University, and
    a few years later to the University of California–San Diego, where, as dean
    and then as vice chancellor, he was central to the creation of its innovative
    new medical school.

  2. B. Messier and Charles P. LeBlond, “Preparation of Coated Radioauto­
    graphs by Dipping Sections in Fluid Emulsion,” Proceedings of the Society
    for Experimental Biology and Medicine 96 (1957), 7-10.

  3. Richard L. Sidman, I. L. Miale, and N. Feder, “Cell Proliferation and
    Migration in the Primitive Ependymal Zone: An Autoradiographic Study
    of Histogenesis in the Nervous System,” Experimental Neurology 1 (1959):
    322-33.

  4. F. C. Sauer, “Mitosis in the Neural Tube,” Journal of Comparative Neurology
    62 (1935): 377-405.

  5. Stephen R. Pelc, “Quantitative Aspects of Autoradiography,” Experimental
    Cell Research 13, Suppl. 4 (1957): 231-7.

  6. L. F. La Cour, and Stephen R. Pelc, “Effect of Colchicine on the Utilization
    of Labelled Thymidine During Chromosomal Reproduction,” Nature 23
    (1958): 506-8.

  7. See A. Lightman, “A Sense of the Mysterious,” Daedalus 132, no. 4 (2003),
    5-21, for a vivid discussion of this phenomenon.

  8. J. B. Angevine, Jr., and R. L. Sidman, “Autoradiographic Study of Cell
    Migration During Histogenesis of Cerebral Cortex in the Mouse,” Nature
    192 (1961): 766-8.

  9. I. L. Miale, and Richard L. Sidman, “An Autoradiographic Analysis of
    Histogenesis in the Mouse Cerebellum,” Experimental Neurology 4 (1961):
    277-96.

  10. Richard L. Sidman, “Histogenesis of Mouse Retina Studied with Thymidine­
    H3,” in The Structure of the Eye, ed. G. K. Smelser (New York: Academic
    Press, 1961), 487-506.

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