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  • E G T Liddell and Sir Charles Sherrington

    Published by Oxford at the Clarendon Press, London, 1929

    Language: English

    Seller: Somerset Books, Glastonbury, United Kingdom

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    Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. A F Kersting (illustrator). New Edition. VG+ / VG- A New Edition. B/w and colour illustrations. Bright gilt titles to spine and upper cover on burgundy cloth boards. Binding is firm and tight. Slight tanning to page edges and end papers. Interior is clean with no inscriptions apart from owner's name pencilled on front fep . Not ex-library. Clipped grey d/j is a little grubby with minor tears and chips.

  • Liddell, E. G. T. & Sir Charles Sherrington

    Published by Clarendon, 1919

    Seller: A Squared Books (Don Dewhirst), South Lyon, MI, U.S.A.

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    Hardcover. Condition: Good. 1919; Oxford; red cloth covered boards with gold titles; covers contain rubbing and wear; bottom inch of spine is torn and unglued; Previous owner's name on front pastedown, ffep, and rear pastedown; Interior is clean and unmarked; 4to - over 9 3/4" to 12" tall; 162 pages.

  • E.G.T. Liddell and Sir Charles Sherrington

    Published by Oxford at the Clarendon Press, London, 1929

    Seller: North Books: Used & Rare, Manchester, NH, U.S.A.

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    Hardcover. Second Edition. 8.25 x 11in. xi. 162pp. 9 plates. Publisher's cloth boards. VERY GOOD in Very Good dust jacket protected in a removable archival cover. The book itself shows one corner lightly tapped, endpapers lightly and evenly toned, otherwise the binding is strong and tight, the text is clean and unmarked, and the boards remain bright and distinct. The dust jacket shows only very slight shelf rubbing of the extremities, a hint of even toning, otherwise remains bright and distinct. As pictured.

  • Liddell, E. G. T. & Sir Charles Sherrington

    Published by Clarendon, 1919

    Seller: Ann Becker, Houston, TX, U.S.A.

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    Hardcover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. Small close tear spine cloth; 8vo 8"-9" tall.

  • Liddell, Edward George Tandy & Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott

    Publication Date: 1025

    Seller: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Germany

    Association Member: ILAB VDA

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    Proc. Roy. Soc. B, 97. - London, Harrison and Sons, 1925, 8°, pp.488-518, 14 Figs., 1 plate, orig. wrappers. Offprint! Physiology Laboratory, Oxford. "The present paper deals with some features of inhibitory relaxation of muscular contraction as observable in the knee extensor (decerebrate cat) when the crossed extensor reflex is subjected to inhibition by stimulation of an afferent nerve of the ipsilateral limb. The myograms have been obtained with the isometric optical myograph described in a previous paper, and the method of preparation, etc., has been as before. I. Relaxation-speed under Strong Inhibition. The speed of the muscular relaxation produced by the inhibition is often notably high. It then compares in rate with that of the lapse of a peripheral tetanus at cessation of the faradic stimulation of the muscle's motor nerve ." Liddell & Sherrington Sir Charles Scott Sherrington (1857-1952) was a British neurophysiologist. His experimental research established many aspects of contemporary neuroscience, including the concept of the spinal reflex as a system involving connected neurons (the "neuron doctrine"), and the ways in which signal transmission between neurons can be potentiated or depotentiated. Sherrington himself coined the word "synapse" to define the connection between two neurons. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1932 (along with Edgar Adrian). In addition to his work in physiology, Sherrington did research in histology, bacteriology, and pathology. Liddell, Edward George Tandy (1895-1981), physiologist, already as an undergraduate Liddell had come under Sherrington's spell and had learned, unlike the majority of undergraduates, to derive inspired instruction from his notoriously difficult lectures. "Sherrington was president of the Royal Society from 1920 to 1925 and had to spend much time in London. Much, therefore, of the responsibility for their experiments necessarily devolved on Liddell, Sherrington's sole collaborator. As he was a beginner, and self-effacing almost to a fault, his contribution was inevitably overshadowed by Sherrington's: but his share in their classic researches went well beyond the level of consummate experimental skills. Their collaboration began at a turning-point in studies of reflex action, when Sherrington's interest was moving away from exteroceptive reflexes as items of animal behaviour and towards the cellular basis of synaptic excitation and inhibition, conceived as summing algebraically at the post-synaptic membrane. The exteroceptive reflexes were elicited by graded electrical stimulation of afferent nerves in spinal and decerebrate animals; the synaptic actions were detected by quantitative high-speed myography. The classical discovery of the proprioceptive stretch reflex was important because it could be elicited only by a pure physiological stimulus, minimal lengthening of a muscle; and because of its essential role in reflex posture. " C. G. Phillips, Memoirs FRS, 29 (1983), 333-359.

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    Proc. Roy. Soc. B, 95. - London, Harrison and Sons, 1925, 8°, pp.299-339, 20 Figs., orig. wrappers. Offprint! "We described recently a difference between the spinal reflex of flexor muscles of knee and ankle on the one hand and the decerebrate crossed reflex of the knee extensor on the other in regard to transmission of the rhythm of the exciting stimulus applied to the afferent nerve. Another difference between these two types of reflexes is exhibited in the form of curve of tension development exhibited in isometric myograms of their tetani. Examination of these shows a divergence which cannot be accounted for by such differences as exist between the tetanic behaviour of the several muscles or motor nerves themselves. I.-Method. The method employed has been the same as in our previous paper. All muscles except that one whose contraction was to be recorded have been paralysed by nerve-section or resection; and the myograph has been of the isometric type with optical registration. As stimuli series of single shocks separated from an inductorium usually coreless have, by means of the vibrating key described in the previous paper, been delivered to the suitably bared afferent or efferent nerve, the anode for the shock being always towards the cut end of the nerve. The distance between the electrodes on the nerve has been 12 mm. Occasionally, the stimuli have been applied by a stigmatic kathode electrode in the skin. The preparation (cat) has been decerebrate, all of the brain anterior to the posterior colliculi being removed. For purely spinal reflexes, the spinal cord has, in addition, been transected either immediately or some days or weeks prior to the decerebration; the level of spinal transection has varied in different experiments between 12th thoracic and 3rd lumbar segments. " Liddell, et al. Sir Charles Scott Sherrington (1857-1952) was a British neurophysiologist. His experimental research established many aspects of contemporary neuroscience, including the concept of the spinal reflex as a system involving connected neurons (the "neuron doctrine"), and the ways in which signal transmission between neurons can be potentiated or depotentiated. Sherrington himself coined the word "synapse" to define the connection between two neurons. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1932 (along with Edgar Adrian). In addition to his work in physiology, Sherrington did research in histology, bacteriology, and pathology. Liddell, Edward George Tandy (1895-1981), physiologist, already as an undergraduate Liddell had come under Sherrington's spell and had learned, unlike the majority of undergraduates, to derive inspired instruction from his notoriously difficult lectures. "Sherrington was president of the Royal Society from 1920 to 1925 and had to spend much time in London. Much, therefore, of the responsibility for their experiments necessarily devolved on Liddell, Sherrington's sole collaborator. As he was a beginner, and self-effacing almost to a fault, his contribution was inevitably overshadowed by Sherrington's: but his share in their classic researches went well beyond the level of consummate experimental skills. Their collaboration began at a turning-point in studies of reflex action, when Sherrington's interest was moving away from exteroceptive reflexes as items of animal behaviour and towards the cellular basis of synaptic excitation and inhibition, conceived as summing algebraically at the post-synaptic membrane. The exteroceptive reflexes were elicited by graded electrical stimulation of afferent nerves in spinal and decerebrate animals; the synaptic actions were detected by quantitative high-speed myography. The classical discovery of the proprioceptive stretch reflex was important because it could be elicited only by a pure physiological stimulus, minimal lengthening of a muscle; and because of its essential role in reflex posture. " C. G. Phillips, Memoirs FRS, .