Biological Order and Brain Organization (e-bog) af -
Akert, K. (redaktør)

Biological Order and Brain Organization e-bog

1021,49 DKK (inkl. moms 1276,86 DKK)
The centennial of his birthday (17 March 1881) prompted the publi- cation of the Selected Works of Walter Rudolf Hess. Although English translation of several of his monographs have appeared, none of his orig- inal papers has ever been published in the English language. During his sci- entific career, Hess made pioneering contributions in the field of hemo- dynamics, pyhsiological optics, oculo...
E-bog 1021,49 DKK
Forfattere Michel, G. P. (oversætter), Akert, K. (redaktør)
Forlag Springer
Udgivet 6 december 2012
Genrer Neurology and clinical neurophysiology
Sprog English
Format pdf
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9783642679483
The centennial of his birthday (17 March 1881) prompted the publi- cation of the Selected Works of Walter Rudolf Hess. Although English translation of several of his monographs have appeared, none of his orig- inal papers has ever been published in the English language. During his sci- entific career, Hess made pioneering contributions in the field of hemo- dynamics, pyhsiological optics, oculomotor diagnostics, regulation of cir- culation, respiration and temperature, and finally on the somatomotor, vis- ceral, and emotional functions of the diencephalon. His concepts concern- ing organization and order in physiology and his views on the important role of the vegetative nervous system in regulating the activity of the central ner- vous system are of great interest to science and medicine and were in many respects far in advance of his time. These concepts continue a line of thought which was upheld by such famous physiologists as Xavier Bichat, Claude Bernard, and Walter B. Cannon. Indeed, Walter Rudolf Hess has become one of the rare figures in the recent history of physiology willing to carry out an integrative analysis of bodily functions and to search for the basic principles of regulation and interaction between regulatory systems. In fact, he anticipated such ideas in biology as feedback control and ser- vomechanisms long before these notions evolved in the field of engineering and electronics.