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As a source of information on neuroanatomical research methods this
Volume is not without precedent. In 1957, at the initiative of Dr.
W. F. Windle, a conference was held at the National Institutes of
Health, the proceedings of which, edited by Dr. Windle and
published by C. C. Thomas under the title "New Research Tech niques
of Neuroanatomy," rapidly became something like a standard
reference in the field of Neuromorphology. The present editors were
emboldened to seek support for a second expose of contemporary
research methods in Neuroanatomy by the success of this earlier
publication, as well as by the consideration that the years elapsed
since its appearance have been, perhaps, more productive of new
research methods and strategies in Neuroanatomy than were any dozen
consecutive years since the golden decades of the 1870's and
1880's. The decision, which methods to include in this conference,
has been a difficult one. For reasons of space alone it would have
been impossible to do equal justice to techniques approaching the
brain as a neuronal system, the brain as a tissue, or the neuron as
a cell. As a brief inspection of the contents of this volume will
show, the weight of choice fell upon the first of these
alternatives. The reader will find, further more, that not all of
the book is devoted to new methods in the strict sense."
I received my first introduction to the brain sciences in 1936 and
1937, for me the second and third years of the 7-year medical
school curriculum at the University of Leiden. During those years
my interest in the subject was aroused in particular by the
brilliant lectures of the physiologist G. C. Rademaker - a
prominent former member of the Rudolf Magnus school - and the
neurohistologist S. T. Bok, noted especially for his histometric
studies of the cerebral cortex. Fascinated as I was by everything I
learned about the brain from these outstanding teachers, toward the
end of their courses I began to notice conspicuous gaps that
separated neurophysiology from neuroanatomy. In fact, I could (or
thought I could) detect a reasonable concordance between the two
sciences only in case of some sensory and somatic-motor systems.
For most other functions anatomical substrates seemed either poorly
defined or, as in the case of the central viscero-endocrine system,
hardly recognized at all. With all the arrogance of which a 20-year
old student is capable I concluded that what the brain sciences
needed was a new and more complete anatomy that emphasized in
particular the continuity of, and convergences or interconnections
between individual conduction systems. And I wistfully mused that
perhaps at some time in the future I could make such an endeavour
part of my own career.
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