10:50 discovery of columnar organization 13:40 modality of neural columns for fingers 15:30 general importance of the modular organization 17:35 study patterns of neural discharge v.s sequential order 20:10 proof of sequential order 28:30 interest conditional neural discharging in infraparietal lobe 30:00 reaching neurons and effects of attention. 37:40 anti-hierarchy in distributed system; 40:20 Tom Paul: same neuron density in most primate visual cortex 46:16 basic operation to discover
Dear SfN, could you enable subtitles and translation for this series, please? That would be very helpful since some of the recordings are sometimes hard to hear plus translating them would make them available to more people. I really like those videos and would like to translate them. Thanks!
Jerzy E. Rose (1909-1992) was born in Poland and trained in Medicine, Psychiatry and Neuroanatomy, the latter under his famous uncle Maximillian Rose as well as with Oskar and Cecile Vogt. He immigrated to the US in 1939 after Germany occupied Poland and settled at the Johns Hopkins University where he met Clinton Woolsey and established a life-long scientific and personal link. His early work was in cytoarchitectonics and comparative and developmental studies of the diencephalon. He published a series of papers with Woolsey culminating in the now classic study of thalamocortical relations of Rose and Woolsey (1949). In 1960 he left Johns Hopkins to join Woolsey at the University of Wisconsin where he proceeded to form one of the foremost laboratories of auditory research in the world by taking up single unit electrophysiological studies of the brainstem auditory centers. He shared the Ralph W. Gerard Award from the Society for Neuroscience with Woolsey, was awarded the Association for Research in Otolaryngology Award of Merit, and was elected to the National Academy of Sciences. Upon his retirement his colleagues established the Jerzy Rose Award in Neuroscience to honor the most outstanding graduate thesis in neuroscience at UW-Madison. Contributions to this fund will allow us to continue awarding this prize to honor his illustrious career.
10:50 discovery of columnar organization
13:40 modality of neural columns for fingers
15:30 general importance of the modular organization
17:35 study patterns of neural discharge v.s sequential order
20:10 proof of sequential order
28:30 interest conditional neural discharging in infraparietal lobe
30:00 reaching neurons and effects of attention.
37:40 anti-hierarchy in distributed system;
40:20 Tom Paul: same neuron density in most primate visual cortex
46:16 basic operation to discover
Dear SfN, could you enable subtitles and translation for this series, please? That would be very helpful since some of the recordings are sometimes hard to hear plus translating them would make them available to more people. I really like those videos and would like to translate them. Thanks!
45:29 we need to know the dynamics
47:20 looking at inter-cortical connections
50:00 thought about distributed systems
Jerzy E. Rose (1909-1992) was born in Poland and trained in Medicine, Psychiatry and Neuroanatomy, the latter under his famous uncle Maximillian Rose as well as with Oskar and Cecile Vogt. He immigrated to the US in 1939 after Germany occupied Poland and settled at the Johns Hopkins University where he met Clinton Woolsey and established a life-long scientific and personal link. His early work was in cytoarchitectonics and comparative and developmental studies of the diencephalon. He published a series of papers with Woolsey culminating in the now classic study of thalamocortical relations of Rose and Woolsey (1949). In 1960 he left Johns Hopkins to join Woolsey at the University of Wisconsin where he proceeded to form one of the foremost laboratories of auditory research in the world by taking up single unit electrophysiological studies of the brainstem auditory centers. He shared the Ralph W. Gerard Award from the Society for Neuroscience with Woolsey, was awarded the Association for Research in Otolaryngology Award of Merit, and was elected to the National Academy of Sciences. Upon his retirement his colleagues established the Jerzy Rose Award in Neuroscience to honor the most outstanding graduate thesis in neuroscience at UW-Madison. Contributions to this fund will allow us to continue awarding this prize to honor his illustrious career.
What a treasure.
Thank you Kun, very helpfull. Great respect for Dr. Mountcastle :)
tks
Who is the professor he references? Jersey Row?
The name is probably Jerzy Roz. It is a Polish name. Jerzy (Yezhi) is George in English.