Milestones in Neuroscience
Research
The following dates and
events were gathered from
several sources. These
events are certainly not all of the important events to take place in
neuroscience...just some of the ones that I have selected.
4000 B.C. to 0 A.D
ca. 4000 B.C. - Euphoriant effect of poppy plant reported in Sumerian
records
ca. 4000 B.C. - Clay tablets from Mesopotamia discuss how to use alcohol
to dilute medicine
ca. 2700 B.C. - Shen Nung originates acupuncture
ca. 1700 B.C. -
Edwin Smith surgical papyrus written. First written
record about the nervous system
ca. 1400-1200 B.C. - Ayuvedic system of Hindu medicine develops
ca. 600 B.C. - Indian physician Sushruta describes surgery for cataracts
in
Sushruta Samhita
ca. 500 B.C. - Alcmaion of Crotona dissects sensory nerves
ca. 500 B.C. - Alcmaion of Crotona describes the optic nerve
ca. 500 B.C. - Empedocles suggests that "visual rays" cause sight
460-379 B.C. - Hippocrates discusses epilepsy as a disturbance of the
brain
460-379 B.C. - Hippocrates states that the brain is involved with
sensation and is the seat of intelligence
387 B.C. - Plato teaches at Athens. Believes brain is seat of mental
process
335 B.C. - Aristotle writes about sleep; believes heart is seat of mental
process
335-280 B.C. - Herophilus (the "Father of Anatomy"); believes ventricles
are seat of human intelligence
280 B.C. - Erasistratus of Chios notes divisions of the brain
Hippocrates
Image courtesy of the Blocker History of Medicine
Collections, Moody Medical Library, Univ. Texas Med. Branch,
Galveston
177 - Galen lecture
On the Brain
ca. 100 - Marinus describes the tenth cranial nerve
ca. 100 - Rufus of Ephesus describes and names the optic chiasm
ca. 390 - Nemesius develops the doctrine of the ventricular localization
of all mental functions
ca. 900 - Rhazes describes seven cranial nerves and 31 spinal nerves in
Kitab al-Hawi Fi Al Tibb
ca. 1000 - Ammar ibn Ali of Mosul extracts cataract from the eye
ca. 1000 - Alhazen compares the eye to a camera-like device
ca. 1000 - Al-Zahrawi (also known as Abulcasis or Albucasis) describes
several surgical treatments for neurological disorders
1021 - Ibn Al-Haytham (Alhazen) publishes
Book of Optics
1025 - Avicenna writes about vision and the eye in
The Canon of
Medicine
1088 - Abu Ruh writes
The Light of the Eyes describing several eye
operations
1260 - Louis IX founds the Hopital des Quinze-Vingts, the first
institution for the blind
1284 - Salvino D'Armate constructs eyeglasses
1316 - Mondino de'Luzzi writes the first European anatomy textbook
(
Anothomia)
1402 - St. Mary of Bethlehem Hospital is used exclusively for the mentally
ill
1410 - Institution for the mentally ill established in Valencia, Spain
Image
courtesy of the National Library of Medicine,
History of Medicine
Collection
1501 - Magnus Hundt uses the word "cerebellum" to describe the posterior division of the brain in
Anthropologia
1504 - Leonardo da Vinci produces wax cast of human ventricles
1536 - Nicolo Massa describes the cerebrospinal fluid
1538 - Andreas Vesalius publishes
Tabulae Anatomicae
1542 - Jean Fernel publishes
De naturali parte Medicinae that
contains the term "physiology" for the first time
1543 -
Andreas
Vesalius publishes
On the Workings of the Human Body
1543 - Andreas Vesalius discusses the pineal gland and draws the corpus
striatum
1549 - Jason Pratensis publishes
De Cerebri Morbis, an early book
devoted to neurological disease
1550 - Vesalius describes hydrocephalus
1550 - Bartolomeo Eustachio describes the brain origin of the optic
nerves
1558 - Giambattista della Porta describes wooden hearing aids in his book
Natural Magick
1561 - Gabriele Falloppio publishes
Observationes Anatomicae
and describes some of the cranial nerves. Separate trochlear and
abducens nerves identified
1562 - Bartolomeo Eustachio publishes
The Examination of the Organ of
Hearing
1564 - Giulio Cesare Aranzi coins the term
hippocampus
1573 -
Constanzo
Varolio names the
pons
1573 - Constanzo Varolio is first to cut brain starting at its base
1573 - Girolamo Mercuriali writes
De nervis opticis to describe
optic nerve anatomy
1583 - Felix Platter states that the lens only focuses light and that
the retina is where images are formed
1583 - Georg Bartisch publishes
Ophthalmodouleia: das ist
Augendienst with drawings of the eye
1586 -
A.
Piccolomini distinguishes between cortex and white matter
1587 - Guilio Cesare Aranzi describes ventricles and hippocampus. He
also demonstrates that the retina has a reversed image
1590 - Zacharias Janssen invents the compound microscope
1596 - Sir Walter Raleigh mentions arrow poison in his book
Discovery
of the Large, Rich and Beautiful Empire of Guiana
Leonardo Da Vinci
Andreas Vesalius
Image courtesy of the Blocker History of Medicine
Collections, Moody Medical Library, Univ. Texas Med. Branch,
Galveston
1601 - Hieronymus Fabricius ab Aquapendente publishes
Tractatus de
Oculo Visusque Organo describing the correct location of the lens
relative to the iris
1604 - Johannes Kepler describes inverted retinal image
1609 - J. Casserio publishes first description of mammillary bodies
1611 - Lazarus Riverius textbook describing impairments on consciousness
published
1621 - Robert Burton publishes
The Anatomy of Melancholy about
depression
1623 - Benito Daca de Valdes publishes the first book on vision testing
and eyeglass-fitting
1627 - William Harvey demonstrates a role of the brain in frog
movement
1641 - Franciscus de la Boe Sylvius describes fissure on the lateral
surface of the brain (Sylvian fissure)
1644 - Giovanni Battista Odierna describes the microscopic appearance of
the fly eye in
L'Occhio della Mosca
1649 -
Rene
Descartes describes pineal as control center of body and mind
1650 - Franciscus de la Boe Sylvius describes a narrow passage between the
third and fourth ventricles (the aqueduct of Sylvius)
1658 - Johann Jakof Wepfer theorizes that a broken brain blood vessel may
cause apoplexy (stroke)
1661 - Thomas Willis describes a case of meningitis
1662 - Rene Descartes
De homine is published (He died in
1650)
1664 -
Thomas
Willis publishes
Cerebri anatome (in Latin)
1664 - Thomas Willis describes the eleventh cranial nerve (accessory
nerve)
1664 - Thomas Willis suggests that cerebrospinal fluid is produced by
the choroid plexus
1664 - Gerardus Blasius discovers and names the "arachnoid"
1664 - Jan Swammerdam causes frog muscle contraction by mechanical
stimuation of nerve
1665 -
Robert
Hooke details his first microscope
1667 - Robert Hooke publishes
Micrographia
1668 - l'Abbe Edme Mariotte discovers the blind spot
1670 - William Molins names the
trochlear nerve
1671 - Franciscus de la Boe Sylvius describes the septum pellucidum
1673 - Joseph DuVerney uses experimental ablation technique in pigeons
1681 - English edition of Thomas Willis'
Cerebri anatome is
published
1681 - Thomas Willis coins the term
Neurology
1684 -
Raymond
Vieussens publishes
Neurographia Universalis
1684 - Raymond Vieussens uses boiling oil to harden the brain
1686 - Thomas Sydenham describes a form of chorea in children and young
adults
1695 - Humphrey Ridley describes the restiform body
1695 - Humphrey Ridley publishes
The Anatomy of the Brain
1696 - John Locke writes
Essay Concerning Human Understanding
1697 - Joseph G. Duverney introduces the term "brachial plexus"
Thomas Willis
Image courtesy of the Blocker History of Medicine
Collections, Moody Medical Library, Univ. Texas Med. Branch,
Galveston
1704 - Antonio Valsalva publishes
On the Human Ear
1705 -
Antonio
Pacchioni describes arachnoid granulations
1709 - Domenico Mistichelli describes the pyramidal decussation
1709 - George Berkeley publishes
New Theory of Vision
1717 -
Antony
van Leeuwenhoek describes nerve fiber in cross section
1721 - The word "anesthesia" first appears in English (in
Dictionary
Britannicum)
1727 - Edward Scarlett develops eyeglasses held by arms that hook over the
ears
1736 - Jean Astruc coins the term
reflex
1740 - Emanuel Swedenborg publishes
Oeconomia regni animalis
1749 - David Hartley publishes
Observations of Man, the first
English work using the word "psychology"
1750 - Jacques Daviel performs the first cataract extraction on a
living human eye
1752 - The Society of Friends establishes a hospital-based environment for
the mentally ill in Philadelphia
1755 - J.B. Le Roy uses electroconvulsive therapy for mental illness
1760 - Arne-Charles Lorry demonstrates that damage to the cerebellum
affects motor coordination
1764 - Domenico F.A. Cotugno describes spinal subarachnoid cerebrospinal
fluid; shows that ventricular and spinal fluids are connected
1764 - The interventricular foramen (Foramen of Monroe) is named after
Alexander Monroe; it was described earlier by Vieussens
1766 - Albrecht von Haller provides scientific description of the
cerebrospinal fluid
1772 - John Walsh conducts experiments on torpedo (electric) fish
1773 - John Fothergill describes trigeminal neuralgia (tic douloureux,
Fothergill's syndrome)
1773 - Sir Joseph Priestley discovers nitrous oxide
1774 - Franz Anton Mesmer introduces "animal magnetism" (later
called hypnosis)
1776 - M.V.G. Malacarne publishes first book solely devoted to the
cerebellum
1777 - Philip Meckel proposes that the inner ear is filled with fluid, not
air
1778 - Samuel Thomas von Soemmerring presents the modern classification of
the twelve cranial nerves
1779 - Antonius Scarpa describes Scarpa's ganglion of the vestibular
system
1780 - Etienne Bonnot de Condillac publishes the first figure of "reflex
action"
1781 - Felice Fontana describes the microscopic features of axoplasm from
an axon
1782 - Francesco Gennari publishes work on "lineola albidior" (later
known as the stripe of Gennari)
1782 - Francesco Buzzi identifies the fovea
1783 - Alexander Monro describes the foramen of Monro
1784 - Benjamin Rush writes that alcohol can be an addictive drug
1784 - Benjamin Franklin mentions bifocal eyeglasses in a letter to George
Whatley
1786 - Felix Vicq d'Azyr discovers the locus coeruleus
1786 - Samuel Thomas Sommering describes the optic chiasm
1786 - Georg Joseph Beer founds the first eye hospital in Vienna
1790 - Johannes Ehrenritter describes the glossopharygeal nerve
ganglion
1791 - Luigi Galvani publishes work on electrical stimulation of frog
nerves
1791 - Samuel Thomas von Soemmering names the macula lutea of the
retina
1792 - Giovanni Valentino Mattia Fabbroni suggests that nerve action
involves both chemical and physical factors
1796 - Johann Christian Reil describes the insula (island of Reil)
1798 - John Dalton, who was red-green colorblind, provides a scientific
description of color blindness
Antony van Leeuwenhoek
Franz Anton Mesmer
Images courtesy of the Blocker History of Medicine
Collections, Moody Medical Library, Univ. Texas Med. Branch,
Galveston
1800 - Alessandro Volta invents the wet cell battery
1800 - Humphrey Davy synthesizes nitrous oxide
1800 - Samuel von Sommering identifies black material in the midbrain and
calls it the "substantia nigra"
1801 - Thomas Young describes astigmatism
1801 - Adam Friedrich Wilhelm Serturner crystalizes opium and obtains
morphine
1801 - Philippe Pinel publishes "A Treatise on Insanity"
1802 - Thomas Young suggests the three types of retinal receptors are
sufficient for color vision
1808 - Franz Joseph Gall publishes work on phrenology
1809 - Johann Christian Reil uses alcohol to harden the brain
1809 - Luigi Rolando uses galvanic current to stimulate cortex
1811 - Julien Jean Legallois discovers respiratory center in medulla
1811 -
Charles
Bell discusses functional differences between dorsal and
ventral roots of the spinal cord
1812 - Benjamin Rush publishes
Medical Inquiries and Observations upon
the Diseases of the Mind
1813 - Felix Vicq d'Azyr discovers the claustrum
1817 -
James
Parkinson publishes
An Essay on the Shaking Palsy
1818 - Library of the Surgeon General's Office established (later to
become the Army Medical Library and then the National Library of
Medicine)
1820 - Galvanometer invented
1821 - Charles Bell describes facial paralysis ipsilateral to facial nerve
lesion (Bell's palsy)
1821 - Francois Magendie discusses functional differences between dorsal
and ventral roots of the spinal cord
1822 - Friedrich Burdach names the
cingular gyrus
1822 - Friedrich Burdach distinguishes lateral and medial geniculate
1823 - Marie-Jean-Pierre Flourens states that cerebellum regulates motor
activity
1824 - John C. Caldwell publishes
Elements of Phrenology
1824 - Marie-Jean-Pierre Flourens details ablation to study behavior
1824 - F. Magendie provides first evidence of cerebellum role in equilibration
1825 - John P. Harrison first argues against phrenology
1825 - Jean-Baptiste Bouillaud presents cases of loss of speech after
frontal lesions
1825 - Robert B. Todd discusses the role of the cerebral cortex in
mentation, corpus striatum in movement and midbrain in emotion
1825 - Luigi Rolando describes the sulcus that separates the precentral
and postcentral gyri
1826 - Johannes Muller publishes theory of "specific nerve
energies"
1827 - E. Merck & Company market morphine
1832 - Justus von Liebig discovers chloral hydrate
1832 - Jean-Pierre Robiquet isolates codeine
1832 - Massachusetts establishes a "State Lunatic Hospital" for the
mentally ill
1832 - Sir Charles Wheatstone invents the stereoscope
1833 - Philipp L. Geiger isolates atropine
1834 - Ernst Heinrich Weber publishes theory of "Just Noticeable
Difference" or "Weber's Law"
1836 - Marc Dax reads paper on left hemisphere damage effects on
speech
1836 - Gabriel Gustav Valentin identifies neuron nucleus and nucleolus
1836 - Robert Remak describes myelinated and unmyelinated axons
1836 - Charles Dickens (the novelist) describes obstructive sleep
apnea
1837 - Jan Evangelista Purkyne (Purkinje) describes large cerebellar cells with many branching dendrites
Purkinje cells; identifies
neuron nucleus and processes
1837 - The American Physiological Society is founded
1838 - Robert Remak suggests that nerve fiber and nerve cell are joined
1838 - Theordor Schwann describes the myelin-forming cell in the
peripheral nervous system ("Schwann cell")
1838 - Jean-Etienne-Dominique Esquirol publishes
Des Maladies
Mentales, possibly the first modern work about mental disorders
1838 - Napoleonic Code leads to the requirement of facilities for the
mentally ill
1838 - Eduard Zeis publishes study about dreams in people who are
blind
1839 - Theodor Schwann proposes the cell theory
1839 - C. Chevalier coins the term
microtome
1839 - Francois Leuret names the
Rolandic sulcus for Luigi
Rolando
1840 - Filippo Pacini describes the Pacinian corpuscle
1840 - Moritz Heinrich Romberg describes a test for conscious
proprioception (Romberg test)
1840 - Adolph Hannover uses chromic acid to harden nervous tissue
1840 - Jules Gabriel Francois Baillarger discusses the connections between
white and gray matter of cerebral cortex
1840 - Adolphe Hannover discovers the ganglion cells of the retina
1841 - Dorothea Lynde Dix investigates brutality within mental hospitals
in the United States
1842 - Benedikt Stilling is first to study spinal cord in serial sections
1842 - Crawford W. Long uses
ether on
man
1842 - Francois Magendie describes the median opening in the roof of the
fourth ventricle (foramen of Magendie)
1843 - James Braid coins the term "hypnosis"
1844 - American Psychiatric Association founded
1844 - Robert Remak provides first illustration of 6-layered cortex
1844 - Horace Wells uses nitrous oxide during a tooth extraction
1845 - Ernst Heinrich Weber and Edward Weber discover that stimulation of
the vagus nerve inhibits the heart
1846 - William Morton demonstrates ether anesthesia at Massachusetts
General Hospital
1847 - Chloroform anesthesia used by James Young Simpson
1847 - Chloroform anesthesia used by Marie Jean Pierre Flourens
1847 - American Medical Association is founded
1847 - The American Association for the Advancement of Science is
founded
1848 - Phineas Gage has his brain pierced by an iron rod
1848 - First meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
1848 - Richard Owen coins the word "notochord"
1849 - Hermann von Helmholtz measures the speed of frog nerve impulses
1850 - Augustus Waller describes appearance of degenerating nerve fibers
1850 - Marshall Hall coins the term
spinal shock
1850 -
Emil
Du Bois-Reymond invents nerve galvanometer
1851 - Jacob Augustus Lockhart Clarke describes the nucleus dorsalis, an
area in the intermediate zone of the spinal cord gray matter
1851 - Heinrich Muller is first to describe the colored pigments in the
retina
1851 - Marchese Alfonso Corti describes the cochlear receptor organ in the
inner ear (organ of Corti)
1851 - Hermann von Helmholtz invents ophthalmoscope
1851 - Andrea Verga describes the cavum vergae
1852 - A. Kolliker describes how motor nerves originate from the
neurons in the anterior horn of the spinal cord
1852 - George Meissner and Rudolf Wagner describe encapsulated nerve
endings later known as "Meissner's corpuscles"
1853 - William Benjamin Carpenter proposes "sensory ganglion"
(thalamus) as seat of consciousness
1854 - Louis P. Gratiolet describes convolutions of the cerebral
cortex
1855 - Bartolomeo Panizza shows the occipital lobe is essential for vision
1855 - Richard Heschl describes the transverse gyri in the temporal lobe
(Heschl's gyri)
1856 - Albrecht von Graefe describes homonymous hemianopia
1857 - Charles Locock observes the anticonvulsive effects of potassium
bromide
1858 - Joseph von Gerlach stains brain tissue with a carmine solution
1859 -
Charles
Darwin publishes
The Origin of Species
1859 - Rudolph Virchow coins the term
neuroglia
1859 - Hermann von Helmholtz publishes work on color blindness
1860 - Albert Niemann purifies cocaine
1860 - Gustav Theodor Fechner develops "Fechner's law"
1860 - Karl L. Kahlbaum describes and names "catatonia"
1861 -
Paul
Broca discusses cortical localization
1861 - T.H. Huxley coins the term
calcarine sulcus
1862 - William Withey Gull describes clinical signs of syringomyelia
1862 - Hermann Snellen invents the eyechart with letters to test
vision
1862 - Wilhelm Friedrich Kuhne demonstrates how motor nerves terminate in muscle cells
1863 - Foramen of Luschka named after Hubert von Luschka
1863 - Ivan Mikhalovich Sechenov publishes
Reflexes of the
Brain
1863 - Nikolaus Friedreich describes a progressive hereditary degenerative
CNS disorder (Friedreich's ataxia)
1863 - Charter of the National Academy of Sciences signed by Abraham Lincoln
1864 -
John
Hughlings Jackson writes on loss of speech after brain injury
1865 - Otto Friedrich Karl Deiters differentiates dendrites and axons
1865 - Otto Friedrich Karl Deiters describes the lateral vestibular
nucleus (Deiter's nucleus)
1866 - John Langdon Haydon Down publishes work on congenital "idiots"
1866 - Julius Bernstein hypothesized that a nerve impulse is a "wave of
negativity"
1866 - Max Schultze discovers the two retinal receptors, rods and cones
1866 - Leopold August Besser coins the term "Purkinje cells"
1867 - Hermann von Helmholtz publishes
Handbook of Physiological
Optics
1867 - Joseph Lister reports his concept of antisepsis
1867 -
Theodore
Meynert performs histologic analysis of cerebral cortex
1868 - Julius Bernstein measures the time course of the action
potential
1868 - Friedrich Goll describes the fasciculus gracilis
1869 - Francis Galton claims that intelligence is inherited (publication
of
Hereditary Genius)
1869 - Johann Friedrich Horner describes eye disorder (small pupil,
droopy eyelid) later to be called "Horner's syndrome"
1870 -
Eduard
Hitzig and
Gustav
Fritsch discover cortical motor area of dog using electrical
stimulation
1870 - Ernst von Bergmann writes first textbook on nervous system
surgery
1871 - Gustav Fechner publishes work about synesthesia
1871 - Silas Weir Mitchell coins the term "phantom limb."
1872 -
George
Huntington describes symptoms of a hereditary chorea
1872 - Sir William Turner describes the interparietal sulcus
1872 - Charles Darwin publishes
The Expression of Emotions in Man and
Animals
1872 - Silas Weir Mitchell provides a clinical description of phantom limb
pain
1873 -
Camillo
Golgi publishes first work on the silver nitrate method
1874 - Jean Martin Charcot describes amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
1874 - Vladimir Alekseyevich Betz publishes work on giant pyramidal cells
1874 - Roberts Bartholow electrically stimulates human cortical tissue
1874 -
Carl
Wernicke publishes
Der Aphasische Symptomencomplex on
aphasias
1875 - Sir David Ferrier describes different parts of monkey motor cortex
1875 - Richard Caton is first to record electrical activity from the brain
1875 - Wilhelm Heinrich Erb and Carl Friedrich Otto Westphal describe the
knee jerk reflex
1876 - David Ferrier publishes
The Functions of the Brain
1876 - Franz Christian Boll discovers rhodopsin
1876 - Francis Galton uses the term "nature and nurture" to explain
"heredity and environment"
1877 -
Jean-Martin
Charcot publishes
Lectures on the Diseases of the
Nervous System
1878 - W. Bevan Lewis publishes work on giant pyramidal cells of human
precentral gyrus
1878 -
Claude
Bernard describes nerve/muscle blocking action of curare
1878 - The first Ph.D. with "psychology" in its title is given to
Granville Stanley Hall at Harvard University
1878 -
Paul
Broca publishes work on the "great limbic lobe"
1878 - W.R. Gowers publishes
Unilateral Gunshot Injury to the Spinal
Cord
1878 - Harmon Northrop Morse synthesized acetaminophen (paracetamol)
1878 - Louis-Antoine Ranvier describes regular interruptions in the
myelin sheath (nodes of Ranvier)
1876 - David Ferrier publishes
The Localization of Cerebral
Disease
1879 - Camillo Golgi describes the "musculo-tendineous organs" (later to
be know as the "Golgi tendon organs")
1879 - Mathias Duval introduces an improved method of embedding tissue
using collodion
1879 - Hermann Munk presents detailed anatomy of the optic chiasm
1879 - William Crookes invents the cathode ray tube
1879 -
Wilhelm
Wundt sets up lab devoted to study human behavior
1879 - Scottish surgeon William Macewen performs successful surgery to
treat a brain abscess
1880 - Jean Baptiste Edouard Gelineau introduces the word "narcolepsy"
1880 - Friedrich Sigmund Merkel describes free nerve endings later known
as "Merkel's corpuscles"
1880 - Thomas Graydon invents the "Dentaphone," a bone conduction hearing
device
1881 - Hermann Munk reports on visual abnormalities after occipital lobe
ablation in dogs
1883 -
Sir Victor
Horsley describes effects of nitrous oxide anesthesia
1883 - Emil Kraepelin coins the terms
neuroses and
psychoses
1883 - George John Romanes coins the term "comparative psychology"
1883 - The Journal of the American Medical Association is founded
1884 - Franz Nissl describes the granular endoplasmic reticulum ("Nissl
Substance")
1884 - Karl Koller discovers anesthetic properties of cocaine by
testing it on his own eye
1884 - Georges Gilles de la Tourette describes several movement disorders
1884 - Theodor Meynert publishes
A Clinical Treatise on the Diseases of
the Forebrain
1884 - English surgeon Richman John Godlee performs surgery to remove a
brain tumor
1885 - Paul Ehrlich notes that intravenous dye does not stain brain
tissue
1885 -
Carl
Weigert introduces hematoxylin to stain myelin
1885 -
Ludwig
Edinger describes nucleus that will be known as the
Edinger-Westphal nucleus
1885 - Hermann Ebbinghaus publishes
On Memory
1885 - Louis Pasteur successfully vaccinates a boy who was bitten by a
rabid dog
1886 - Joseph Jastrow earns the first Ph.D. from the first formal
PhD program in psychology at Johns Hopkins University
1886 - V. Marchi publishes procedure to stain degenerating myelin
1887 -
Sergei
Korsakoff describes symptoms characteristic in alcoholics
1887 - The National Institutes of Health established
1887 - Alfred Binet and C. Fere publish
Animal Magnetism, a study
on hypnosis
1887 - Adolf Eugen Fick makes the first contact lens out of glass for
vision correction
1887 - G. Stanley Hall publishes the first issue of the American Journal
of Psychology
1887 - English surgeon Victor Horsley successfully removes a spinal cord
tumor
1888 - William Gill describes anorexia nervosa
1888 - William W. Keen, Jr. is first American to remove intracranial
meningioma
1888 - Hans Chiari introduces the term "syringomyelia"
1888 - Giovanni Martinotti describes cortical cells later known as
"Martinotti cells"
1888 - J. Madison Taylor, working for S. Weir Mitchell, designs the firest reflex hammer
1889 -
Santiago
Ramon y Cajal argues that nerve cells are independent elements
1889 - William His coins the term
dendrite
1889 - Sir Victor Horsley publishes somatotopic map of monkey motor
cortex
1889 - Carlo Martinotti describes cortical neuron with ascending axon
(this neuron now bears his name,
Martinotti cell)
1889 - F.C. Muller-Lyer discovers the
Muller-Lyer illusion
1890 - Wilhelm Ostwald discovers the membrane theory of nerve
conduction
1890 - William James publishes
Principles of Psychology
1890 - James Cattell coins the term "mental tests"
1890 - Adolph Beck publishes observations of spontaneous electrical activity from rabbit and dog brains
1891 - H. Quincke introduces the lumbar puncture
1891 - Wilhelm von Waldeyer coins the term
neuron
1891 - Luigi Luciani publishes manuscript on the cerebellum
1891 - Heinrich Quinke develops the lumbar puncture (spinal tap)
1892 - Santiago Ramon y Cajal publishes
Structure of the Retina
1892 - Salomen Eberhard Henschen localizes vision to calcarine fissure
1892 - American Psychological Association formed
1892 - Arnold Pick first describes "Pick's disease"
1893 -
Paul
Emil Flechsig describes myelinization of the brain
1893 - Charles Scott Sherrington coins the term
proprioceptive
1894 -
Franz
Nissl stains neurons with dahlia violet
1894 - Margaret Floy Washburn is the first woman to receive a Ph.D.
(Cornell University) in psychology
1894 - Recognizes that neuromuscular junction transmission requires
calcium ions
1895 - William His first uses the term
hypothalamus
1895 -
Wilhelm
Konrad Roentgen invents the X-ray
1895 - Heinrick Quincke performs lumbar puncture to study cerebrospinal
fluid
1895 - Formalization of the cranial nerve number system published in
Basle Nomina Anatomica
1896 - Max von Frey details "stimulus hairs" to test the somatosensory
system
1896 - Rudolph Albert von Kolliker coins the term
axon
1896 - Camillo Golgi discovers the
Golgi apparatus
1896 -
Joseph Babinski describes the
Babinski Sign
1896 - Emil Kraeplein describes
dementia praecox
1896 - John William Strutt publishes
The Theory of Sound
1897 -
Ivan
Petrovich Pavlov publishes work on physiology of digestion
1897 - Karl Ferdinand Braun invents the oscilloscope
1897 - John Jacob Abel isolates adrenalin
1897 -
Charles
Scott Sherrington coins the term
synapse
1897 - Ferdinand Blum uses formaldehyde as brain fixative
1897 - Acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) is synthesized by Felix
Hoffmann
1898 - Charles Scott Sherrington describes decerebrate rigidity in cat
1898 - Edward Lee Thorndike describes the
puzzle box
1898 - Bayer Drug Company markets heroin as nonaddicting cough medicine
1898 - John Newport Langley coins the term
autonomic nervous
system
1898 - Angelo Ruffini describes encapsulated nerve endings later known as
Ruffini corpuscles
1899 - Francis Gotch describes a "refractory phase" between nerve
impulses
1899 - Bayer AG markets aspirin
1899 - Miller Hutchison invents one of the first electric hearing aids
called the "Akoulalion"
1899 ->Sigmund Freud publishes>
The Interpretation of Dreams
1899 - Karl Gustav August Bier uses cocaine for intraspinal
anesthesia
John Hughlings
Jackson
Image
courtesy of the National Library of Medicine, History of Medicine
Collection
Charles
Darwin
Hermann von
Helmholtz
Jean-Martin
Charcot
Claude
Bernard
Images courtesy of the Blocker History of Medicine
Collections, Moody Medical Library, Univ. Texas Med. Branch,
Galveston
Camillo
Golgi
Courtesy of the National Library of
Medicine.
1900 - Charles Scott Sherrington states that cerebellum is head ganglion
of the proprioceptive system
1900 - M. Lewandowsky coins the term "blood-brain barrier"
(Bluthirnschranke) [ref: Aschner and Kerper,
Mol. Biol. and Tox. of
Metals, 2000]
1902 - Julius Bernstein proposes membrane theory for cells
1902 - Physiologist Ida Hyde is the first woman elected to the American
Physiological Society
1902 - Oskar Vogt and Cecile Vogt coin the term "neurophysiology"
1903 - Ivan Pavlov coins the term
conditioned reflex
1903 - Alfred Walter Campbell studies cytoarchitecture of anthropoid
cerebral cortex
1904 - Procaine is synthesized
1904 - Thomas Elliott suggests that autonomic nerves may release chemical
transmitters
1905 - Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon have their first intelligence test
1905 - John Newport Langley coins the phrase "parasympathetic nervous
system"
1905 - Austrian ophthalmologist Eduard Zinn performs the first successful
human corneal transplant
1906 -
Alois
Alzheimer describes
presenile degeneration
1906 - Golgi and Cajal-Nobel Prize-Structure of the Nervous System
1906 - Sir Charles Scott Sherrington publishes
The Integrative Action
of the Nervous system that describes the synapse and motor cortex
1907 - Ross Granville Harrison describes tissue culture methods
1907 - John Newport Langley introduces the concept of receptor
molecules
1908 - Vladimir Bekhterew describes the superior nucleus of the vestibular
nerve (Bekhterew's nucleus)
1908 - Victor Alexander Haden Horsley and Robert Henry Clarke design
stereotaxic instrument
1908 - Willem Einthoven makes string galvanometer recordings from the
vagus nerve
1908 - Oberga introduces the cisterna puncture, a method to access the
cerebrospinal fluid through the cistena magna
1908 - Eugen Bleuler coins the term
schizophrenia
1909 - Tetrodotoxin isolated from the pufferfish and named by Yoshizumi
Tahara
1909 -
Harvey
Cushing is first to electrically stimulate human sensory cortex
1909 -
Korbinian
Brodmann describes 52 discrete cortical areas
1909 - Karl Jaspers publishes
General Mental Illness
1910 - Emil Kraepelin names
Alzheimer's disease
1911 - Allvar Gullstrand-Nobel Prize-Optics of the eye
1911 - George Barger and Henry Dale discover norepinephrine
(noradrenaline)
1912 - Original formula for the intelligence quotient (IQ) developed by
William Stern
1913 - Santiago Ramon y Cajal develops gold chloride-mercury stain to show
astrocytes
1913 - Edwin Ellen Goldmann finds blood brain barrier impermeable to large
molecules
1913 - Edgar Douglas Adrian publishes work on all-or-none principle in
nerve
1913 - Walter Samuel Hunter devises delayed-response test
1914 - Robert Barany-Nobel Prize-Vestibular apparatus
1914 - Henry H. Dale isolates acetylcholine
1915 - J.G. Dusser De Barenne describes activity of brain after strychnine
application
1915 - Walter B. Cannon coins the term "fight or flight" in his book
Bodily Changes in Pain, Hunger, Fear and Rage: An Account of Recent
Researches into the Function of Emotional Excitement
1915 - Aspirin becomes available without a prescription
1916 - Richard Henneberg coins the term
cataplexy
1916 - George Guillain, Jean Alexander Barre and Andre Strohl describe an
acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (Guillain-Barre
Syndrome)
1916 - Shinobu Ishihara publishes a set of plates to test color vision
1916 - Lewis M. Terman publishes
The Measurement of Intelligence
1918 - Walter E. Dandy introduces the
ventriculography
1918 - Ernst Moro describes a baby's defensive reflex to slapping a pillow on both sides of the infant's head ("Moro reflex")
1919 -
Cecile
Vogt describes over 200 cortical areas
1919 - Walter E. Dandy introduces the air encephalography
1919 -
Gordon
Morgan Holmes localizes vision to striate area
1919 - Pio del Rio Hortega divides neuroglia into microglia and
oligodendroglia
1919 - Konstantin Tretiakoff describes changes in the substatia nigra in
people with Parkinson's disease
1920 - Society of Neurological Surgeons is founded
1920 -
Henry
Head publishes
Studies in Neurology
1920 - Stephen Walter Ranson demonstrates connections between the
hypothalamus and pituitary
1920 - John B. Watson and Rosalie Rayner publish experiments about
classical conditioning of fear (Little Albert experiments)
1921 - Otto Loewi publishes work on
Vagusstoff
1921 - Hermann Rorschach develops the
inkblot test
1921 - John Augustus Larsen and Leonard Keeler develop the polygraph
1921 - del Rio Hortega describes microglia
1922 - Army Medical Library established (was the Library of the Surgeon
General's Office)
1923 - Capgras syndrome described by Jean Marie Joseph Capgras
1924 - Charles Scott Sherrington discovers the
stretch reflex
1924 - Hans Berger records the first human electroencephalogram (EEG)
1925 -
C.
von Economo and G.N. Koskinas revise Brodmann's cortical
nomenclature of the cerebral cortex
1926 - Percival Bailey and Harvey Cushing publish paper describing more
the 2,000 neuroepithelial neoplasms
1927 - Chester William Darrow studies galvanic skin reflex in US
1928 - Dorothy Klenke Nash becomes the first female neurosurgeon to practice in the United States
1928 - Philip Bard suggests the neural mechanism of rage is in the
diencephalon
1928 - Walter Rudolph Hess reports "affective responses" to hypothalamic
stimulation
1928 - John Fulton publishes his observations (made in 1926 and 1928) of
the sounds of blood flowing over the human visual cortex
1929 -
Hans
Berger publishes his findings about the first human
electroencephalogram
1929 -
Karl
Lashley defines "equipotentiality" and "mass action"
1927 -
J.
Wagner-Jauregg - Nobel Prize-Malaria to treat dementia paralyses
1928 - Edgar Douglas Adrian publishes
The Basis of Sensation
1929 - Joseph Erlanger and Herbert Spencer Gasser publish work on the
correlation of nerve fiber size and function
1929 - Walter B. Cannon coins the term
homeostasis
1930 - John Carew Eccles shows central inhibition of flexor reflexes
1931 - Ulf Svante von Euler and J.H. Gaddum discover substance P
1932 - Max Knoll and Ernst Ruska invent the electron microscope
1932 - Jan Friedrich Tonnies develops ink-writing EEG machine
1932 - Edgar Douglas Adrian and Charles S. Sherrington share Nobel Prize
for work on the function of neurons
1932 - Jan Friedrich Toennies and Brian Matthews design the
differential amplifier
1932 - Smith, Kline and French introduce the first amphetamine,
Benzedrine
1933 - Ralph Waldo Gerard describes first experimental evoked potentials
1934 - S. Howard Bartley performs studies on cortical visual evoked
potentials in rabbits
1935 - Ward C. Halsted establishes the first clinical neuropsychological
laboratory in the United States
1935 - Dexedrine (an amphetamine) introduced to treat narcolepsy
1935 - Frederic Bremer uses cerveau isole preparation to study sleep
1935 - Stroop Test developed
1935 - Jan Friedrich Toennies develops a five-channel ink-writing EEG
1936 -
Egas
Moniz publishes work on the first human frontal lobotomy
1936 - Henry Hallett Dale and Otto Loewi share Nobel Prize for work on
the chemical transmission between nerves
1936 - Walter Freeman performs first lobotomy in the United States
1937 -
James
Papez publishes work on limbic circuit
1936 - Massachusetts General Hospital has first EEG laboratory
1937 - Heinrich Kluver and Paul Bucy publish work on bilateral temporal
lobectomies
1937 - James W. Papez develops "visceral theory" of emotion
1937 - John Zachary Young suggests that the squid giant axon can be used
to understand nerve cells
1937 - Julius Steinfeld publishes report of using insulin shock to treat schizophrenia
1938 - Isador Rabi coins term "magnetic resonance"
1938 -
B.F.
Skinner publishes
The Behavior of Organisms that
describes operant conditioning
1938 - Albert Hofmann synthesizes LSD
1938 - Phenobarbital is approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration
1938 - The Journal of Neurophysiology is first published
1938 -
Ugo
Cerletti and Lucino Bini treat human patients with
electroshock
1938 - Franz Kallmann publishes
The Genetics of Schizophrenia
1938 - "Ames Room" designed by Adelbert Ames, Jr.
1939 - Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale developed
1939 - Carl Pfaffman describes directionally sensitive cat
mechanoreceptors
1939 - Nathaniel Kleitman publishes
Sleep and Wakefulness
1939 - The Eastern EEG Association (Society) is formed
1941 - Chloral hydrate (a sedative) is approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration
1942 - Judith Graham develops a KCl-filled glass electrode for recording
muscle fiber resting membrane potential
1942 - Stephen Kuffler develops the single nerve-muscle fiber
preparation
1943 - John Raymond Brobeck describes hypothalamic hyperphasia
1944 - Joseph Erlanger and Herbert Spencer Gasser share Nobel Prize for
work on the functions of single nerve fiber
1944 - Leo Kanner coins the term
autism
1946 - Theodor Rasmussen describes the olivocochlear bundle (bundle of
Rasmussen)
1946 - President Truman signs the National Mental Health Act
1947 - The American Society of Electroencephalography is founded
1947 - German neurologist Joachim Bodamer coins the term "prosopagnosia"
(face blindness)
1948 - The World Health Organization is founded
1949 - Kenneth Cole develops the voltage clamp
1949 - A.C.A.F. Egas Moniz-Nobel Prize-Leucotomy to treat certain psychoses
1949 - Walter Rudolph Hess receives Nobel Prize for work on the "Interbrain"
1949 - Horace Winchell Magoun defines the reticular activating system
1949 - John Cade discovers that lithium is an effective treatment for
bipolar depression
1949 - Giuseppi Moruzzi and Horace Winchell Magoun publish
Brain Stem
Reticular Formation and Activation of the EEG
1949 - Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children is published
1949 - The
Journal of EEG and Clinical Neurophysiology begins publication
1949 - National Institute of Mental Health is formally established
1949 - Donald Olding Hebb publishes
The Organization of Behavior: A
Neuropsychological Theory
Charles Scott
Sherrington
Courtesy of the National Library of
Medicine.
Harvey
Cushing
Courtesy of the National Library of
Medicine
Egas
Moniz
Courtesy of the National Library of Medicine
1950 - present
1950 - National Science Foundation is created by Public Law 81-507
1950 - Seconal (barbituate; antianxiety medication) is approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration
1950 - Karl Lashley publishes
In Search of the Engram
1950 - Eugene Roberts and J. Awapara independently identify GABA in the
brain
1950 - The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
established (it has gone through several name changes)
1950 - French chemist Paul Charpentier synthesizes chlorpromazine, an
antipsychotic drug
1950 - Wilder Penfield published the book
The Cerebral Cortex of Man
1951 - MAO-inhibitors introduced to treat psychotics
1951 - B.F. Skinner describes
shaping in a paper titled
How to
Teach Animals
1952 - The Diagnostic and Statistic Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) is
published by the American Psychiatric Association
1953 - Brenda Milner discusses patient HM who suffers from memory loss
after hippocampal surgery
1953 - Eugene Aserinski and Nathaniel Kleitman describe rapid eye
movements (REM) during sleep
1953 - Serpasil (reserpine; an antipsychotic drug) is approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration
1953 - H. Kluver and E. Barrera introduce Luxol fast blue MBS stain
1953 - Stephen Kuffler publishes work on center-surround, on-off
organization of retinal ganglion cell receptive fields
1953 - James Watson and Francis Crick publish paper revealing the
molecular structure of DNA
1953 - Dilantin (phenytoin; an antiepileptic drug) is approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration
1954 - James Olds describes rewarding effects of hypothalamic stimulation
1954 - John Lilly invents the "isolation tank"
1954 - Thorazine (chlorpromazine; an antipsychotic drug) is approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration
1954 -
Chlorpromazine is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
1955 - Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale is published
1955 - Ritalin (methylphenidate; a mild stimulant) is approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration
1956 - L. Leksell uses ultrasound to examine the brain
1956 - National Library of Medicine named (was the Army Medical
Library)
1956 - Rita Levi-Montalcini and Stanley Cohen isolate and purify nerve
growth factor
1957 -
W.
Penfield and T. Rasmussen devise motor and sensory homunculus
1957 - The American Medical Association recognizes alcoholism as a
disease
1958 - Paul Janssen develops haloperidol as a neuroleptic drug
1959 - P. Karlson and M. Lusher coin the term "pheromone"
1960 - Ro 5-0690 (Librium), the first benzodiazepine, is approved by the FDA
1960 - Oleh Hornykiewicz shows that brain dopamine is lower than normal
in Parkinson's disease patients
1961 -
Georg
Von Bekesy awarded the Nobel Prize for his work on the function of the
cochlea
1961 - Levadopa successfully treats parkinsonism
1961 - Elavil (amitriptyline; an antidepressant drug) is approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration
1961 - International Brain Research Organization founded
1962 - Eldon Foltz performs the first cingulotomy to treat chronic
pain
1963 - John Carew Eccles, Alan Lloyd Hodgkin and Andrew Fielding Huxley
share Nobel Prize for work on the mechanisms of the neuron cell membrane
1963 - Valium (diazepam; an antianxiety drug) is approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration
1964 - Psychobiology Department founded at the University of California, Irvine
1965 - Ronald Melzack and Patrick D. Wall publish gate control theory of
pain
1965 - Drug Abuse Control Act
1966 - Department of Neurobiology founded at Harvard Medical School
1967 - Ragnar Arthur Granit, Halden Keffer Hartline and George Wald share
Nobel Prize for work on the mechanisms of vision
1967 - Haldol (haloperidol; an antipsychotic drug) is approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration
1967 - International Neuropsychological Society established
1968 - Alexander Romanovich Luria publishes
The Mind of a Mnemonist; A
Little Book About a Vast Memory
1968 - National Eye Institute is established
1968 - The National Institute of Neurological Diseases is renamed the National Institute on Neurological Disorders and Stroke
1968 - Tegratol (carbamazepine; an antiepileptic drug) is approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration
1969 - D.V. Reynolds describes the analgesic effect of electrical
stimulation of the periaqueductal gray
1969 - The Society for Neuroscience is formed
1970 - Julius Axelrod, Bernard Katz and Ulf Svante von Euler share Nobel
Prize for work on neurotransmitters
1971 - The first annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience is held in Washington, D.C.
1971 - Godfrey N. Hounsfield develops x-ray computed tomography
1972 - Jennifer LaVail and Matthew LaVail use horseradish peroxidase to
study axonal transport
1973 - Candace Pert and Solomon Snyder demonstrate opioid receptors in
brain
1973 - Sinemet is introduced as a treatment for Parkinson's disease
1973 - Konrad Z. Lorenz, Nikolaas Tinbergen and Karl von Frisch share
Nobel Prize for work on ethology
1973 - Timothy Bliss and Terje Lomo describe long-term potentiation
1973 - M.E.Phelps, E.J.Hoffman and M.M.Ter Pogossian develop first PET
scanner
1974 - National Institute on Drug Abuse established
1974 - National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism established
1974 - International Association for the Study of Pain founded
1974 - John Hughes and Hans Kosterlitz discover enkephalin
1974 - First NMR image (a mouse) is taken
1975 - John Hughes and Hans Kosterlitz publish work on enkephalins
1975 - Nembutol (pentobarbital sodium; a barbiturate drug) is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration
1975 - Loxitane (loxapine; an antipsychotic drug) is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration
1975 - Klonopin (clonazepam; an antiepileptic drug) is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration
1976 - Choh Hao Li and David Chung publish work on beta-endorphin
1976 - Erwin Neher and Bert Sakmann develop the patch-clamp technique
1977 - Roger Guillemin and Andrew Victor Schally share Nobel Prize for
work on peptides in the brain
1980 - Mental Health Systems Act of 1980 is signed by Jimmy Carter
1981 - David Hunter Hubel and Torsten N. Wiesel-Nobel Prize-visual system
1981 - Roger Wolcott Sperry awarded Nobel Prize-functions brain hemispheres
1981 - Xanax (alprazolam; an antianxiety drug) is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration
1982 - Bengt Ingemar Bergstrom, John Robert Vane and Sune K. Bergstrom
awarded Nobel Prize for the discovery of prostaglandins
1982 - Halcion (triazolam; an antianxiety drug) is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration
1983 - A genetic test for Huntington's disease is announced
1986 - Stanley Cohen and Rita Levi-Montalcini awarded Nobel prize for
their work on the control of nerve cell growth
1987 -
Fluoxetine
(Prozac) introduced as treatment for depression
1990 - U.S. President George Bush declares the decade starting in 1990 the
"Decade of the Brain"
1991 - Erwin Neher and Bert Sakmann share the Nobel Prize for their work
on the function of single ion channels
1992 - National Institute on Drug Abuse becomes part of the National
Institutes of Health
1992 - Giacomo Rizzolatti describes mirror neurons in area F5 of the
monkey premotor cortex
1993 - The genetic code responsible for Huntington's disease is identified
1994 - Alfred G. Gilman and Martin Rodbell share the Nobel Prize for their
discovery of G-protein coupled receptors and their role in signal
transduction
1997 - Stanley B. Prusiner awarded the Nobel Prize for the discovery of
prions; a new biological principle of infection
2000 - American Psychological Association launches the Decade of Behavior campaign
2000 - Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard and Eric Kandel share the Nobel
Prize for their discoveries concerning signal transduction in the nervous
system
2004 - Linda B. Buck and Richard Axel share the Nobel Prize for their
discoveries about odorant receptors and the organization of the olfactory
system
2006 - The term "optogenetics" first appears in a publication
2013 - The start of the Human Brain Project is announced
2013 - James Rothman, Randy Schekman, and Thomas Sudhof share
the Nobel Prize for their discoveries about the machinery regulating
vesicle traffic
2013 - US President Barack Obama announces the Brain Research
through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative
2014 - John O'Keefe, Edvard Moser, and May-Britt Moser share the Nobel
Prize for their discoveries about cells that constitute a positioning system in
the brain
2017 - Jeffery C. Hall, Michael Rosbash and Michael W. Young share the Nobel Prize for their
discoveries of molecular mechanisms controlling the circadian rhythm
2021 - David Julius and Ardem Patapoutian share the Nobel Prize for
discoveries of receptors for temperature and touch
Wilder Penfield
Roger
Sperry
Courtesy of the Archives
California
Institute of Technology
Try it!
Do you like interactive word search puzzles? Make sure your
browser is "java-enabled" and try these:
References:
- Afifi, A.K. and Bergman, R.A., Functional Neuroanatomy, New
York: McGraw-Hill, 1998. The margins of this text are filled with
historical facts about the origins of neuroanatomical structures and
discoveries.
- Albert, D.M., Dates in Ophthalmology. A Chronological Record of
Progress in Ophthalmology Over the Last Millennium, New York:
Parthenon Publishing Group, 2002.
- Bennett, M.R., The early history of the synapse: From Plato to
Sherrington, Brain Research Bulletin, 50:95-118, 1999.
- Brazier, M.A.B., A History of the Electrical Activity of the
Brain, London: Pitman, 1961.
- Brazier, M.A.B., A History of Neurophysiology in the 19th
Century, New York: Raven Press, 1988.
- Clarke, E. and Dewhurst, K., An Illustrated History of Brain
Function, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1972.
- Clarke, E. and C.D. O'Malley, C.D., The Human Brain and Spinal
Cord, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1968.
- Finger, S., Origins of Neuroscience, New York: Oxford
University Press, 1994.
- Finger, S. Minds Behind the Brain: A History of the
Pioneers and Their Discoveries, New York: Oxford
University Press, 2000.
- Francis, R.L., The Illustrated Almanac of Science Technology and
Invention, New York: Plenum Press, 1997.
- Glickstein, M. Neuroscience. A Historical Introduction,
Cambridge (MA): MIT Press, 2014.
- Gross, C.G., Brain, Vision, Memory. Tales in the History of
Neuroscience, Cambridge, MIT Press, 1998.
- Harding, A.S., Milestones in Health and Medicine, Phoenix
(AZ) Oryx Press, 2000.
- Kandel, E.R. and Squire, L.R., Neuroscience: Breaking Down Scientific
Barriers to the Study of Brain and Mind, in Science, 290:1113-1120,
2000.
- Marshall, L.H. and Magoun, H.W., Discoveries in the Human
Brain, Totowa; Humana Press, 1998.
- Martensen, R.L., The Brain Takes Shape. An Early History, New
York: Oxford University Press, Inc., 2004.
- Millon, T., Masters of the Mind. Exploring the Story of Mental
Illness from Ancient Times to the New Millennium, Hoboken (NJ): John
Wiley and Sons, 2004.
- Pickover, C.A., The Medical Book. From Witch Doctors to Robot
Surgeons, 250 Milestones in the History of Medicine, New York:
Sterling, 2012.
- Rose, F.C. and Bynum, W.F., Historical Aspects of
the Neurosciences. A Festschrift for Macdonald Critchely, New York:
Raven Press, 1982.
- Sebastian, A. Dates in Medicine. A Chronological Record of
Medical Progress Over Three Millennia, New York: The Parthenon
Publishing Group, 2000
- Shepherd, G.M., Foundations of the Neuron Doctrine, New York:
Oxford University Press, 1991.
- Street, W. R. A Chronology of Noteworthy Events in American Psychology, Washington, DC: American Psychological Association, 1994.
- Swartz, B.E. and Goldenshon, E.S., Timeline of the history of EEG and
associated fields, Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., 106:173-176,
1998.
- Wickens, A.P., A History of the Brain: From Stone Age Surgery to
Modern Neuroscience, New York: Psychology Press, 2015.
- The Journal of the History of the Neurosciences. Basic and
Clinical Perspectives has some excellent papers in their
"Neuroanniversary" series.
Image
courtesy of the National Library of Medicine
For more information, see: