منابع مشابه
Vernon Remembered
Editor's Note: The world of neuroscience lost one of its pioneers when Vernon B. Mountcastle, M.D., died January 11 in Baltimore at age 96. Often referred to as " the father of neuroscience, " Mountcastle defied early skeptics by showing how cylinders of neurons, dedicated to specific tasks, work together. This month's Cerebrum features remembrances from two colleagues influenced by Mountcastle...
متن کاملDiminutive Metoposaurid Skulls from the Upper Triassic Blue Hills (adamanian:latest Carnian) of Arizona
We describe two tiny metoposaurid specimens from the lower part of the Chinle Group in the Blue Hills of east-central Arizona. The more complete of these specimens is an incomplete skull anterior to the orbits (45 mm preorbitallength) and numerous skull roof and palate fragments. The less complete specimen is a 25-mm-long skull roof fragment surrounding the left orbit. Based on the sutural rela...
متن کاملAtmospheric composition 1 million years ago from blue ice in the Allan Hills, Antarctica.
Here, we present direct measurements of atmospheric composition and Antarctic climate from the mid-Pleistocene (∼1 Ma) from ice cores drilled in the Allan Hills blue ice area, Antarctica. The 1-Ma ice is dated from the deficit in (40)Ar relative to the modern atmosphere and is present as a stratigraphically disturbed 12-m section at the base of a 126-m ice core. The 1-Ma ice appears to represen...
متن کاملColey’s Lessons Remembered
The following four observations point in the same direction, namely that there is an unleveraged potential for stimulating the innate immune system against cancer: (1) experimental treatments with bacterial extracts more than 100 years ago by Coley and contemporaries, (2) a positive correlation between spontaneous regressions and febrile infection, (3) epidemiological data suggesting an inverse...
متن کاملHardy's "Small" Discovery Remembered.
The most beautiful mathematics to Godfrey Harold Hardy was that which had no application. For Hardy, mathematics was purely for intellectual challenge. He justified the pursuit of pure mathematics with the argument that its very “uselessness” meant that it could not be used to cause harm. Hardy went so far as to describe applied mathematics as “ugly”, “trivial”, and “dull” [1]. Despite Hardy’s ...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: BMJ
سال: 2016
ISSN: 1756-1833
DOI: 10.1136/bmj.i3757