Junkes Larissa, Nardi Antonio E
Institute of Psychiatry, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Institute of Psychiatry, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Brain Res. 2025 Mar 1;1850:149384. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2024.149384. Epub 2024 Dec 4.
Ninety years after his death in 1934, the artistic beauty of the innovative brain images created by physician and histologist Santiago Ramón y Cajal, as well as his revolutionary neuroanatomical theory, remains relevant today. As a scientist who isolated brain nerve cells, he visualized them as physically distinct entities, answering one of the most crucial questions of his time. Prior to his work, the prevailing belief was in the reticular theory, which suggested that nervous tissue was continuous and formed a network of interconnected cells. His anatomical studies helped establish the foundations of modern neuroscience. Cajal, who worked in solitude for many years, embodied one of the most important virtues of a scientist in his life: perseverance.
1934年,生理学家兼组织学家圣地亚哥·拉蒙·卡哈尔与世长辞。90年后,他所创作的创新型脑图像的艺术之美以及他那具有革命性的神经解剖学理论在今天依然具有重要意义。作为一名分离出脑神经细胞的科学家,他将这些细胞视为物理上相互独立的实体,解答了他那个时代最关键的问题之一。在他的研究工作之前,普遍流行的是网状理论,该理论认为神经组织是连续的,由相互连接的细胞构成一个网络。他的解剖学研究为现代神经科学奠定了基础。多年来一直独自工作的卡哈尔,在其一生中展现出了科学家最重要的美德之一:坚持不懈。