The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4 Quotes

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The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4 (Autobiographies) The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4 by Larry R. Squire
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The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4 Quotes Showing 1-12 of 12
“autobiography”
Larry R. Squire, The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4
“autobiography was a largely unfamiliar”
Larry R. Squire, The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4
“efore the Alfred P. Sloan”
Larry R. Squire, The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4
“We are particularly fortunate to be able to include a contribution from W. Maxwell (Max) Cowan, who passed away on June 30, 2002.”
Larry R. Squire, The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4
“My early childhood years were during the final phase of World War II. My earliest memories were happy ones of a large family (I was the fourth child; later, two more were born) in a nice house with a large yard on a river, the Eger, in the town of Eger (now Cheb, a city”
Larry R. Squire, The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4
“The Germans in this multicultural border region were mainly members of the upper class: teachers, lawyers, factory owners, and clergy. My father's family (architect and brickyard owner) was well-to-do until the political upheavals resulting from World War I occurred (collapse of the old Austrian Habsburg”
Larry R. Squire, The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4
“medicine. Accounts of scientific lives in neuroscience hold the promise of being informative and interesting, and they could be a source of inspiration”
Larry R. Squire, The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4
“California, Irvine, 1967-1973: Lew Bettinger and Joel Davis moved with us; Herman Birch, Craig Cegavske, Ray Demarco, Paul”
Larry R. Squire, The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4
“anyone I apologize. Students in my laboratory at the University of Oregon Medical School (including MD-MS students) 1959-1967: Lew Bettinger, David Bliss, Joel Davis,”
Larry R. Squire, The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4
“Kettner and lesion work by David Lavond that the cerebellum was involved in eyeblink conditioning, but the cerebellar lesion”
Larry R. Squire, The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4
“thank the Society for Neuroscience and the Editor of The History of Neuroscience in Autobiography for the invitation to share with neuroscientific colleagues,”
Larry R. Squire, The History Of Neuroscience In Autobiography, Volume 4