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Since the last symposium on "Neuronal Mechanisms of Hearing" held
in Prague in 1980 and published in the volume of the same name (J.
Syka and L. Aitkin, Eds., Plenum Press, 1981), remarkable progress
has been achieved in the understanding of the auditory system. A
variety of new ideas and new methods have emerged. This progress
can be easily documented by comparing the volume based on the 1980
Symposium with the program for the 1987 Symposium. For example,
there were 45 contributions to auditory physiology in each
symposium but there were 27 contributions focusing on anatomy in
1987 as compared to 7 in 1980, and perhaps most telling, there were
12 contributions to the neurochemistry of the system in 1987 while
there were only 3 in 1980. In terms of percentages of
contributions, neuroanatomy rose from 13% to 32% and neurochemistry
(or chemical anatomy) rose from 5% in 1980 to 14% in 1987. These
increases in the numbers and proportions of anatomical and
neurochemical contributions undoubtedly reflects the increasing
availabil ity and rising expertise in the new neuroanatomica1 and
biochemical techniques most notably, tract-tracing by exploitation
of axonal transport or by intracellular micro-injection methods,
and neurotransmitter identifi cation by use of immunocytochemistry
or receptor-binding techniques. New ideas have emerged on the
function of cochlear hair cells particularly in connection with
olivococh1ear bundle stimulation and supported by findings of
contractile proteins in outer hair cells."
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