Advice for a Young Investigator

The Spanish scientist, Santiago Ramón y Cajal (1852- 1934) is regarded as one of the founders of modern neuroscience. As a talented artist and a photographer, he converted numerous microscopic images into scientific drawings which still continue to be used in neuroscience textbooks today. He was in conflict with his contemporary Camillo Golgi who supported the widely accepted idea that the nervous system was a meshwork made of continuous nerve fibers. Instead, he proposed that the nervous system consisted of individual nerve cells connected to each other by contact zones (synapse). He postulated the Law of Dynamic Polarization, which stated that the dendrites and the cell body of a neuron received information whereas the axon transmitted it to distant sites. In 1906, Nobel Prize was awarded to Cajal and Golgi in recognition of their work on the structure of the nervous system

Advice for a Young Investigator

The Spanish scientist, Santiago Ramón y Cajal (1852- 1934) is regarded as one of the founders of modern neuroscience. As a talented artist and a photographer, he converted numerous microscopic images into scientific drawings which still continue to be used in neuroscience textbooks today. He was in conflict with his contemporary Camillo Golgi who supported the widely accepted idea that the nervous system was a meshwork made of continuous nerve fibers. Instead, he proposed that the nervous system consisted of individual nerve cells connected to each other by contact zones (synapse). He postulated the Law of Dynamic Polarization, which stated that the dendrites and the cell body of a neuron received information whereas the axon transmitted it to distant sites. In 1906, Nobel Prize was awarded to Cajal and Golgi in recognition of their work on the structure of the nervous system
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