"This is a book about the collaboration between Hubel and Wiesel, which began in 1958, lasted until about 1982, and led to a Nobel Prize in 1981. It opens with short autobiographies of both men, describes the state of the field when they started, and tells about the beginnings of their collaboration." This book will appeal to neuroscientists, vision scientists, biologists, psychologists, physicists, historians of science, and to their students and trainees, at all levels from high school on, as well as to anyone else who is interested in the scientific process.
A Technical work on Visual System and Visual Processing
A Nobel Partnership: Hubel & Wiesel
Brain and Visual Perception: The Story of a 25-Year Collaboration
David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel came to Harvard from Johns Hopkins University with Steven Kuffler in the early 1960s to establish the Department of Neurobiology at Harvard Medical School. Their breakthrough discoveries about the visual system and visual processing earned them the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1981.
Hubel and Wiesel recorded electrical activity from individual neurons in the brains of cats.
They used a slide projector to show specific patterns to the cats and noted that specific patterns stimulated activity in specific parts of the brain. Such single-neuron recordings were an innovation at the time, enabled by Hubel’s earlier invention of a special recording electrode. They systematically created a map of the visual cortex with these experiments. The original film projector, light filters and slides, are held at the Warren Anatomical Museum at the Countway Library of Medicine.
История исследования зрительной системы. В книге оживает история получения знаний о восприятии, которые сегодня считаются хрестоматийными и входят во все хендбуки по сенсорной физиологии и психологии