About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 39. Chapters: Emil Adolf von Behring, Ewald Hering, Walter Heiligenberg, Carl Ludwig, Rudolf Wagner, Otto Frank, Wilhelm Kuhne, Ludwig Traube, Theodor Wilhelm Engelmann, Jacques Loeb, Ernst Heinrich Weber, Albrecht Kossel, Caspar Friedrich Wolff, Eduard Friedrich Wilhelm Pfluger, Gabriel Valentin, Julius Bernstein, Rudolf Magnus, Felix Hoppe-Seyler, Karl Vogt, Max Rothmann, Max Rubner, Nathan Zuntz, Carl von Voit, Karl von Vierordt, Heinrich von Recklinghausen, Erich von Holst, Max Verworn, Ludolf von Krehl, Adolf Eugen Fick, Johann Christian Reil, Friedrich Bidder, William Thierry Preyer, Paul Zweifel, Rudolf Heidenhain, Maximilian von Frey, Georg Friedrich Nicolai, Ludimar Hermann, Karl Hurthle, Adolf Loewy, Siegmund Mayer, Alfred Wilhelm Volkmann, Paul Morawitz, Friedrich Goltz, Conrad Eckhard, Carl Semper, Oskar Langendorff, Ignaz Dollinger, Georg Meissner, Viktor von Weizsacker, Isidor Rosenthal, Franz Schweigger-Seidel, Johannes Gad, Franz Christian Boll, Johann Nepomuk Czermak, Paul Grutzner, Elias Rudolph Camerarius Jr., Alexander Schmidt, Hermann Rudolph Aubert, Rudolf Hober, Albert von Bezold, Leonard Landois, Siegmund Gabriel, Karl Friedrich Burdach, Otto Funke, Theodor Ludwig Wilhelm von Bischoff, Friedrich Arnold, Emil Osann, Wilhelm Trendelenburg, Hermann Munk. Excerpt: Walter Heiligenberg (January 31, 1938 - September 8, 1994) is best known for his contribution to neuroethology through his work on one of the best neurologically understood behavioral patterns in vertebrate, Eigenmannia (Zupanc and Bullock 2006). This weakly electric fish and the neural basis for its jamming avoidance response behavioral process was the main focus of his research, and is fully explored in his 1991 book, "Neural Nets in Electric Fish." As an international scientist, he worked alongside other neuroethologists and...