The Journal of Comparative Neurology and Psychology, Volume 14Editorial Office, Denison University, 1904 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 6
... experiments with various dyes as a coun- terstain , the following was found most suitable , inasmuch as it dyed the muscle fiber an orange , the sheath of HENLE a rose- pink and the neurilemma a faint pink : Acid fuchsin Orange " G " I ...
... experiments with various dyes as a coun- terstain , the following was found most suitable , inasmuch as it dyed the muscle fiber an orange , the sheath of HENLE a rose- pink and the neurilemma a faint pink : Acid fuchsin Orange " G " I ...
Page 20
... experiments it was necessary that time as well as space should be considered , 60 minutes was fixed as the duration of the experiment , and in case the animal re- mained on the board longer than that period the test was re- corded as a ...
... experiments it was necessary that time as well as space should be considered , 60 minutes was fixed as the duration of the experiment , and in case the animal re- mained on the board longer than that period the test was re- corded as a ...
Page 24
... experiments , I classified the species under the three categories Water , Land - Water , and Land Species in order ... experiments were made with blindfolded tortoises . The eyes , in these experiments , were covered with tin - foil caps ...
... experiments , I classified the species under the three categories Water , Land - Water , and Land Species in order ... experiments were made with blindfolded tortoises . The eyes , in these experiments , were covered with tin - foil caps ...
Page 25
... experiments , that the tactual and muscular impressions received when the legs are stretched over the edge have any in- hibitory influence on the movement . From this it is clear that the hesitation of this species observed at heights ...
... experiments , that the tactual and muscular impressions received when the legs are stretched over the edge have any in- hibitory influence on the movement . From this it is clear that the hesitation of this species observed at heights ...
Page 26
... experiments have already been made which show that the direction of turning , apart from vision , is extremely important in the motor habits of tortoises and frogs . I gratefully acknowledge my indebtedness to Mr. SAMUEL HENSHAW for ...
... experiments have already been made which show that the direction of turning , apart from vision , is extremely important in the motor habits of tortoises and frogs . I gratefully acknowledge my indebtedness to Mr. SAMUEL HENSHAW for ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
aboral side action adult Anat animal appear Area of fasci axis backward behavior BETHE birth brain cage cathode cell body centrosome cervical changes chorda tympani cilia color Comparative Neurology cytoplasm degeneration dendrites DENISON UNIVERSITY described direction dorsal roots electric current electric stimulus embryo epithelium experimental experiments fact fascicle fasciculus gracilis fibrillae fibrils frog ganglion cells granules guinea pig HOLMGREN left spinal nerves light Limulus medullated medullated fibers ment method movements muscle fiber nerve cells nerve fibers nervous system neurofibrillae neurone NISSL non-medullated normal nucleolus nucleus number of fibers Number of nerve observed olfactory epithelium olfactory nerve oral organism paper Paramecia Paramecium peripheral physiological position protoplasm psychical Psychology reflex relation sensory sheath spinal nerves stage stain STATKEWITSCH structure substance swimming TABLE thoracic tigroid tion University ventral roots vicarious chorion visual white rat
Popular passages
Page 435 - AS yield readily to organic, or true animal iron treatment. A resort to inorganic iron preparations or tonics, serves only to stimulate corpuscular proliferation without supplying sufficient nutrition to mature the blood cells.
Page 281 - Mark Anniversary Volume. To Edward Laurens Mark, Hersey Professor of Anatomy and Director of the Zoological Laboratory at Harvard University, in Celebration of Twenty-five Years of Successful Work for the Advancement of Zoology, from his Former Students, 1877-1902.
Page 380 - Ancemia logically, rationally and radically, for several substantial reasons: 1. Because it supplies the starving organism with the requisites for immediate reparation. 2. Because it needs no preparation or transformation at the hands of the vital machinery before it can be assimilated and converted into living force.
Page 380 - BOVININE comes to the rescue by supplying a vitalized and perfectly compounded pabulum that calls for no chemico-vital effort or expenditure whatever. Have we made the contrast between BOVININE and all the rest of the prepared foods distinct enough? If not, please apply the crucial test — clinical use — at our expense, and convince yourself that our claims are neither extravagant nor exaggerated, but are strictly based...
Page 208 - TRUE ANIMAL IRON Physicians everywhere are looking for a Blood reconstructant that contains every element of nutrition of the animal, mineral and vegetable kingdoms, viz.: Animal Iron...
Page 534 - Animal Iron, 20 % Coagulable Albumen, and all the constituents of healthy Blood. It is thoroughly sterile, requires little or no digestion, and produces blood corpuscles that Mature* Corpuscles of fullness and integrity.
Page 528 - AV. 1887. Contribution to the fauna of the Gulf of Mexico and the South. List of the fresh-water and marine Crustacea of Alabama, with descriptions of the new species and synoptical keys for identification.
Page 527 - Nat., vol. 17, pp. 381-389, 499-505, pis. 5-7. 1884. A final report on the Crustacea of Minnesota included in the orders Cladocera and Copepoda.
Page 534 - Our scientific treatise on Haematherapy for the asking. It contains reports of hundreds of cases. THE BOVININE COMPANY 75 West Houston...
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.