Giné Elena, Martínez Carmen, Sanz Carmen, Nombela Cristina, de Castro Fernando
Sección Departamental Biología Celular, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Department of Biological and Health Psychology, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Front Neuroanat. 2019 Jul 16;13:72. doi: 10.3389/fnana.2019.00072. eCollection 2019.
At the beginning of the 20th century, in view of the growing international recognition of Santiago Ramón y Cajal, the Spanish authorities took some important steps to support Cajal's scientific work. This recognition peaked in 1906, when Camillo Golgi and Santiago Ramón y Cajal shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. The Spanish government provided Cajal a state-of-the-art laboratory in Madrid to allow him to continue with his research and they funded salaries to pay his first tenured collaborators, the number of which increased further after the creation of the . The was an organism set up to help promising researchers develop their careers in different ways, thereby contributing to the development of science in Spain. Although largely forgotten or relatively unknown, there has been a recent revival in the recognition of the school that developed around Cajal, collectively referred to as the Spanish Neurological School (or colloquially, as the Cajal School or School of Madrid). Almost all Cajal's collaborators were men, although a limited number of female scientists spent part of their careers at the heart of the Cajal School. Here we discuss these women and their work in the laboratory in Madrid. We have tracked the careers of Laura Forster (from Australia/United Kingdom), Manuela Serra, María Soledad Ruiz-Capillas and María Luisa Herreros (all Spanish), through their scientific publications, both in the journal founded by Cajal and elsewhere, and from other documentary sources. To complete the picture, we also outline the careers of other secondary figures that contributed to the production and running of Cajal's laboratory in Madrid. We show here that the dawn of Spanish neuroscience included a number of contributions from female researchers who to date, have received little recognition.
20世纪初,鉴于圣地亚哥·拉蒙·伊·卡哈尔在国际上获得的认可日益增加,西班牙当局采取了一些重要举措来支持卡哈尔的科学研究工作。这种认可在1906年达到顶峰,当时卡米洛·高尔基和圣地亚哥·拉蒙·伊·卡哈尔共同获得了诺贝尔生理学或医学奖。西班牙政府在马德里为卡哈尔提供了一个最先进的实验室,以便他能够继续开展研究,并为他的首批十位终身合作者提供资金支付薪水,在[具体机构名称]成立后,这一数字进一步增加。[具体机构名称]是一个旨在帮助有前途的研究人员以不同方式发展其职业生涯的组织,从而为西班牙的科学发展做出贡献。尽管在很大程度上已被遗忘或相对鲜为人知,但最近围绕卡哈尔发展起来的学派重新得到了认可,该学派被统称为西班牙神经科学派(通俗地说,称为卡哈尔学派或马德里学派)。几乎卡哈尔的所有合作者都是男性,不过有少数女性科学家在卡哈尔学派的核心领域度过了部分职业生涯。在此,我们将讨论这些女性及其在马德里实验室的工作。我们通过她们在卡哈尔创办的期刊及其他地方发表的科学论文,以及其他文献资料,追踪了劳拉·福斯特(来自澳大利亚/英国)、曼努埃拉·塞拉、玛丽亚·索莱达德·鲁伊斯 - 卡皮利亚斯和玛丽亚·路易莎·埃雷罗斯(均为西班牙人)的职业生涯。为了全面呈现情况,我们还概述了其他对马德里卡哈尔实验室的运作和研究成果有贡献的次要人物的职业生涯。我们在此表明,西班牙神经科学的开端包含了许多女性研究人员的贡献,而迄今为止,她们几乎未得到认可。