![]() |
Edgar Douglas Adrian -Lord Adrian - İngiliz Fizyoloji Bilgini |
![]() |
![]() |
#1 |
[KAPLAN]
|
![]() Edgar Douglas Adrian -Lord Adrian - İngiliz Fizyoloji BilginiADRIAN, LORD (1889-1977) Sir Charles Sherrington ile birlikte, sinirlerin beyinden organlara mesaj getirip götürme mekanizmasın, açıklayan İngiliz fizyoloji bilgini ![]() ![]() ![]() Adrian's first research work was done with Keith Lucas, who was working on the impulses transmitted by motor nerves; he showed that, when a muscle fibre contracts, the passage of the nerve impulse that causes the contractions leaves the motor nerve in a state of diminished excitability ![]() ![]() First, however, Adrian went to London to take his medical degree and was, until the end of the First World War occupied with work on military patients suffering from nerve injuries or nervous disorders ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() With this apparatus he was able to record the electrical discharges in single nerve fibres which were produced by tension on the muscle, pressure on it, touch, the movement of a hair and pricking with a needle ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Later Adrian extended his investigations to a study of the electrical impulses caused by stimuli likely to cause pain, he concluded that, as Sir Henry Head had postulated as a result of his clinical studies, the nerve fibres which conduct impulses excited by pain probably do not pass further into the brain than the optic thalamus, but that all other sensory impulses can be distinguished in the sensory area of the cortex of the brain and he showed that the part of the cerebral cortex devoted to any particular kind of end organ is related to the special needs of the animal concerned ![]() ![]() ![]() Subsequently, Adrian studied the sense of smell and the electrical activity of the brain and the variations and abnormalities of waves shown in the encephalogram, which Hans Berger, of Jena, had described in 1929 ![]() ![]() For his work about the functions of neurones Adrian was awarded, jointly with Sir Charles Sherrington, the Nobel Prize for 1932 ![]() The results of Adrian's brilliant researches on the electrophysiology of the brain and nervous system were published in numerous scientific papers and in his three books, The Basis of Sensation (1927), The Mechanism of Nervous Action (1932) and The Physical Basis of Perception (1947) ![]() ![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|