Olry / Haines | Rhinencephalon, Tabes dorsalis and Elpenor's Syndrome | Buch | 978-0-367-64651-6 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 188 Seiten, Format (B × H): 183 mm x 260 mm, Gewicht: 563 g

Olry / Haines

Rhinencephalon, Tabes dorsalis and Elpenor's Syndrome

The Fascinating Stories Behind These and Other Neuroscience Terms
1. Auflage 2022
ISBN: 978-0-367-64651-6
Verlag: Routledge

The Fascinating Stories Behind These and Other Neuroscience Terms

Buch, Englisch, 188 Seiten, Format (B × H): 183 mm x 260 mm, Gewicht: 563 g

ISBN: 978-0-367-64651-6
Verlag: Routledge


This book is a fascinating collection of various neuroscience terms coined over the last centuries. Each of the 45 chapters in this book dives deep into the etymologies, vernacular subtleties and historical anecdotes relating to these terms.

The book illustrates the rich and diverse history of neuroscience, which has borrowed and continues to borrow terms and concepts from across cultures, literature and languages. The ever-increasing number of terms that needed to be coined with the mushrooming of the field required neuroscientists to show astonishing imagination and creativity, leading them to draw inspiration from Graeco-Roman mythology (Elpenor’s syndrome), literature (Lasthenie de Ferjol’s syndrome), theatre (Ondine’s curse), Japanese folklore (Kanashibari), and even the Bible (Matthew effect). This book will of be immense interest to scholars and researchers studying neuroscience, history of science, anatomy, psychology and linguistics. It will also appeal to any reader interested in learning more about neuroscience and its history.

All the chapters included in this book were originally published in a column that appeared from 1997 to 2020 in the Journal of the History of the Neurosciences.

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Weitere Infos & Material


- Rhinencephalon: A Brain for the Nose?

- Fornix and Gyrus fornicates: Carnal Sins?

- Cerebral Mythology: A Skull Stuffed With Gods

- The Three Musketeers and the Twelve Cranial Nerves

- Just What is the Inferior Cerebellar Peduncle?

- Vague, Uncertain, Ambiguous, Obscure: Imprecision or Modesty?

- Vater, Pacini, Wagner, Meissner, Golgi, Mazzoni, Ruffini, Merkel and Krause: Were their nerves all on edge?

- The Subfornical and Subcommissural Organs: Never-Ending Rediscoveries

- Arachnophobia: Spiders and Spider’s Webs in the Head

- Claustrum: A Sea Wall Between the Island and the Shell?

- Phantom Limb: Haunted Body?

- Lasthénie de Ferjol’s Syndrome: A Tribute Paid by Jean Bernard to Jules Amédée Barbey d’Aurevilly

- Ansa Hypoglossi or Ansa Cervicalis: That is the Question…

- Reissner’s Fibre: The Exception Which Proves the Rule, or the Devil According to Charles Baudelaire?

- If there are "Deep" Cerebellar Nuclei, Where are the "Superficial" Ones?

- "James Parkinson did not die of his own personal disease… he died of a stroke" Eponyms: Possessive or Nonpossessive?

- Give a Kiss to a Frog and it Will Turn into… A Neuropeptide: The Genealogy of the Bombesin-Like Family

- Nomenclature of Persistent Carotid Vertebrobasilar Anastomoses

- Interthalamic Adhesion: Scruples About Calling a Spade a Spade?

- Herophilus’ Press, Torcular and Confluens Sinuum: A Triple Mistake

- From Dante Alighieri’s First Circle to Paul Donald MacLean’s Limbic System

- Elpenor’s Syndrome: The Link Between One of Ulysses’ Companions and the Tenth President of the Third French Republic

- Munchausen Syndrome By Proxy: Karl Frie


Régis Olry, MD, MSC (France), is Professor of Anatomy at the University of Québec, Trois-Rivières, Canada, and has previously held faculty positions in Germany (Heidelberg and Marburg). He has published numerous articles and three books on the history of anatomical terminology, and has received awards for university teaching and his articles on the origins of words and phrases in the neurosciences.

Duane E. Haines, PhD, has held faculty positions at Wake Forest, Mississippi, West Virginia (Professor and Chairman), and at Medical College of Virginia. He is the author of numerous scientific papers and 15 books, including a brain atlas and a neuroscience text. He has held offices in scientific organizations and participated in the writing of Nomina Anatomica.



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