The Journal of Comparative Neurology and Psychology, Volume 14Editorial Office, Denison University, 1904 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 2
... appears to have been influenced in his deductions by the fact that in staining with gold chloride , he obtained ... appear a very doubtful procedure to base results on the simi- larity of staining reactions . By this intra - vitam ...
... appears to have been influenced in his deductions by the fact that in staining with gold chloride , he obtained ... appear a very doubtful procedure to base results on the simi- larity of staining reactions . By this intra - vitam ...
Page 5
... appear necessary to compare the results observed by RUFFINI and others using gold chloride methods with the results obtained by the intra - vitam methylene blue method . Method : The muscles of the frog used were either the M. sartorius ...
... appear necessary to compare the results observed by RUFFINI and others using gold chloride methods with the results obtained by the intra - vitam methylene blue method . Method : The muscles of the frog used were either the M. sartorius ...
Page 6
... appear . As soon as these are well marked the muscle is fastened to cork and placed in ammonium molybdate solution ( 5 % ) at a tem- perature near freezing point . Temperature plays a very im- portant part in the subsequent treatment of ...
... appear . As soon as these are well marked the muscle is fastened to cork and placed in ammonium molybdate solution ( 5 % ) at a tem- perature near freezing point . Temperature plays a very im- portant part in the subsequent treatment of ...
Page 7
... less common ; one notes that the better stained the preparation the less frequently it appears . 1 Arch . f . mikrosk . Anat . , 1890 , Bd . xxxv . In the frog the end - arborizations do not terminate WILSON , Motor Endings of the Frog . 7.
... less common ; one notes that the better stained the preparation the less frequently it appears . 1 Arch . f . mikrosk . Anat . , 1890 , Bd . xxxv . In the frog the end - arborizations do not terminate WILSON , Motor Endings of the Frog . 7.
Page 13
... appears as a very fine fibrilla to which an end knob or bulb may be attached ( Fig . 1 , B & C , Fig . 9 ) or at the terminal knob of each of those root - like structures which at times are projected from the fibrils of a nerve ending ...
... appears as a very fine fibrilla to which an end knob or bulb may be attached ( Fig . 1 , B & C , Fig . 9 ) or at the terminal knob of each of those root - like structures which at times are projected from the fibrils of a nerve ending ...
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Common terms and phrases
adult Anat animal appear Area of fasci basophile behavior BETHE birth brain cell body centrosome cervical changes cilia color crabs cross-section cytoplasm degeneration dendrites diameter dorsal roots electric stimulus embryo epithelium experimental experiments fact fascicle fascicle Number fasciculus gracilis fibrillae fibrils frog function ganglion cells gemmules guinea pig HOLMGREN INGBERT left spinal nerves legs light medullated medullated fibers membrane ment method movements muscle fiber nerve cells nerve fibers nervous system neurofibrillae neurone NISSL granules non-medullated normal nuclear nucleolus nucleus Number of fascicle number of fibers Number of nerve observations olfactory organs Paramecium peripheral physiological position protoplasm psychical psychology reaction reflexes relation sarcolemma sensory sheath spinal ganglion spinal nerves stage stain STILLING'S structure substance swimming TABLE thoracic tigroid tion tissue ventral and dorsal ventral roots vicarious chorion visual white rat
Popular passages
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Page 435 - My thesis now is this : that, when we think of the law that thought is a function of the brain, we are not required to think of productive function only ; we are entitled also to consider permissive or transmissive function. And this the ordinary psycho-physiologist leaves out of his account.
Page 291 - ... reacts positively to large patches of bright sunlight rather than to small ones, even though the latter, as in the case of the sun, may be much more intense.
Page 79 - Thorndike ( 1914) , an eminent proponent of this view, wrote that the mind must be regarded not as a functional unit, nor even as a collection of a few general faculties which work irrespective of particular material, but rather as a multitude of functions each of which involves content as well as form, and so is related closely to only a few of its fellows, to the others with greater and greater degrees of remoteness (p.
Page 382 - Mass., at the Biological Laboratory of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences at Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, at Ogunquit, Maine, and at Randolph, NH I wish to express my obligations to Dr.
Page 18 - I have found in the case of all puppies, and several other kinds of animals examined, that even on the first day of birth they will not creep off a surface on which they rest, if elevated some little distance above the ground. When they approach the edge they manifest hesitation, grasp with their claws or otherwise attempt to prevent themselves falling, and, it may be, cry out, giving evidence of some profound disturbance in their nervous system.
Page 78 - The answer which I shall try to defend is that a change in one function alters any other only in so far as the two functions have as factors identical elements. The change in the second function is in amount that due to the change in the elements common to it and the first. The change is simply the necessary...
Page 79 - Improvement in any single mental function need not improve the ability in functions commonly called by the same name. It may injure it. Improvement in any single mental function rarely brings about equal improvement in any other function, no matter how similar, for the working of every mental function-group is conditioned by the nature of the data in each particular case.