Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 February 2018
It was originally our intention to cover the whole ground of the pathology of the cortical nerve-cells in relation to insanity. But in the course of our more recent investigations we have been strongly impressed with the fact that there are certain as yet little known, but very grave fallacies, into which investigators in this field are in danger of running; and it seemed to us in the first place imperative to clear these up before formulating conclusions regarding the relation of cortical nerve-cell changes to insanity.
∗ Read at the Annual Meeting of the Medico-Psychological Association, Edinburgh, 1898, and illustrated by a microscopical demonstration.Google Scholar
∗ Rivista di Patologia Nervosa e Mentale, 1897, f. 2.Google Scholar
∗ Loc. cit.Google Scholar
∗ Journal of Mental Science, July, 1898.Google Scholar
∗ Robertson, W. F., “The Normal Histology and Pathology of the Neuroglia,” Journal of Mental Science, October, 1897.Google Scholar
∗ State Hospitals Bulletin, 1897, p. 368.Google Scholar
∗ Neppi, A., Rivista di Patologia Nervosa e Mentale, 1897, f. 4; Barbacci, O. and Campacci, G., ibid., 1897, f. 8; Levi, Giulio, ibid., 1898, f. 1.Google Scholar
∗ Journal of Physiology, 1894.Google Scholar
† Annali di Nevrologia, 1897, f. 5.Google Scholar
∗ Neurolog. Centralbl., 1897, p. 915.Google Scholar
† Rivista di Patologia Nervosa e Mentale, 1898, f. 5.Google Scholar
eLetters
No eLetters have been published for this article.