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21st Symposium of the International Society for Clinical
Electrophysiology of Vision, Budapest, Hungary, May 30-June 3, 1983
In Dedication to Hermann Burian (1906-1974) T. LAWWILL (Louisville)
This 14th Symposium of the International Society for Clinical
Electro- retinography is dedicated to the memory of a great
ophthalmologist, great physiologist, former officer of this
Society, and my professor, Hermann Martin Burian. Dr. Burian was a
visual physiologist and an ophthalmologist. His physiol- ogy
heritage was the finest. His father, Richard, was an eminent
European physiologist who at the time of Dr. Burian's birth was
director of the Stazione Zoologica in Naples. The family later
moved to Leipzig and Belgrade, where Dr. Burian's father held
professorships. Hermann Burian's ophthalmological academic heritage
was also outstand- ing. After graduating from medical school in
1930 in Belgrade, he became a student of Tschermak and along the
way worked with such famous men as Siegrist, Goldmann and Weigert.
In 1936, Dr. Burian came to the USA to join the Dartmouth Eye
Insti- tute. Here he worked in ocular motility under Professor
Bielschowsky and in physiological optics under Professor Ames. He
was chief ophthalmologist of the Darmouth Eye Institute from
194245. He was in the private practice of ophthalmology in Boston
for six years before moving to Iowa City, Iowa where, for twenty
years, he practiced and taught ophthalmology and carried out
research on many problems in ophthalmology and visual physiology.
Dr. Burian's two main interests were strabismus and
electrophysiology, but this did not keep him from publishing
outstanding work on glaucoma, congenital anomalies, and color
vision.
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