News

The Club continued its activities with the December meeting on James Parkison, the third meeting at ICM (Institut du cerveau et de la moelle épinière). Moreover, a history session was organized at the French Société des Neurosciences meeting in Bordeaux, NeuroFrance 2017. The two present research programs deal with neuronal degeneration and Louis Lapicque.

We deeply deplore the loss of our friends Members of the Club of these recent years, Jacques Taxi (1922-2017), Pierre Buser (1921-2013), Yves Galifret (1920-2013), Yves Laporte (1920-2012), Marc Jeannerod (1935-2011), Arlette Rougeul-Buser (1924- 2010) and Jacques Paillard (1920- 2006).

Jacques Taxi prepares the SPCN in 1940 at the faculté des sciences in Paris, later to become UPMC in 1968, where he stayed throughout his entire career. He was away only in 1943 and 1944 to escape STO and enter French Resistance. After his agrégation in Natural History, he became assistant to René Couteaux and prepared a doctorate on the innervation of intestinal smooth muscle cells. Jacques Taxi acquired a lasting recognition in the field of the autonomic nervous system. He used dyes, histochemical techniques and electron microscopy, a technique he was still using when he was 93 years old, with as much pleasure and efficiency to demonstrate the different structural elements involved in neurotransmitter release and actions, in particular the “Corps de Taxi”, a post-synaptic structure with still no defined role.

Pierre Buser founded the Institut des neurosciences in Paris. He was educated at the Lycée Kléber, and the École normale supérieure in Paris, where he was received in physics. After the agrégation de biologie, he was awarded a Ph.D. in biology (1953), and became assistant professor and then full professor of physiology at the Faculté des sciences de Paris in 1961. He opened his own laboratory the same year in the building called Barre Cassan, where he remained during his active retirement. Pierre Buser started his career as an electrophysiologist in the 1940s at the Institut Marey, then headed by Alfred Fessard. His work dealt with secondary areas and visuomotor integration and their cortical projections. He pioneered a model protocol to record motor activities in the spinal cord of animals without movement, which he called marche fictive (“fictive locomotion”).

Yves Laporte had been elected to the French Académie des Sciences on June 17th 1985 in the section of human biology and medical sciences. His main researches dealt with the functional organisation of spinal cord, the innervation and properties of the different types of motor units of the striated muscle and sensori-motor innervation of complex sensory organs of the muscle, muscle spindles. He was honorary professor of the Collège de France and was in charge of its administration for 12 years from 1980 to 1991. He was Commandeur de la Légion d'Honneur, Grand'Croix de l'Ordre National du Mérite and Commandeur des Palmes Académiques.

Marc Jeannerod (1935-2011) was Emeritus Professor at the Claude Bernard University in Lyons. M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Physiology in Lyons, he was head of a research unit on vision and motricity of the National institute of health and medical research (Inserm) until 1997, then at the Cognitive science institute UMR 5015 of CNRS until 2003.

Arlette Rougeul-Buser, Retired Research Director at CNRS, was a member of the UMR7102, laboratory of the neurobiology of adaptative processes headed by Jean Mariani and Danièle Tritsch.

Jacques Paillard founded a pluridisciplinary CNRS research center of psychophysics, a discipline he promoted at the university. He initated research activities on sports and motor activities, and he was a founder and organiser of the Brain and Behaviour Society at a European level.

Yves Galifret was one of the last figures of the close circle of students of the French school of Experimental psychology of Henri Piéron (1881-1964), Professor at the Collège de France. The scientific work of Yves Galifret follows the initial project of Piéron, described in 1910 as an experimental psychology, escaping the strict frame of Fechner’s law, focussed on the analysis of the senses by neurophysiological interpretations based on nervous and neuronal activities. The studies of Yves Galifret primarily focussed on the psychophysiological analyses of vision, escaping the absolute description of Fechner’law, and close to Harvard psychologist Stanley Smith Stevens (1906-1973), whose theory gave alternative ways of analyses. He trained in electrophysiology in the school of Alfred Fessard at the Marey Institute, a renowned CNRS centre, where he worked with Pierre Buser on the neuronal mechanisms of vision. At the end of the 1950s, he developed a way to implant fine tungsten electrodes in the brain of pigeon to study the binocular vision of colours. Yves Galifret always devoted equal energy to his teaching and to his role as an engaged scientist at the Union Rationaliste, where he was General secretary, and directed scientific activities and publications for more than 50 years. Yves Galifret also wrote articles of history of science, epistemology and philosophy of science.

Present Activities (2014-2016)

The Club was part of several projects including a long lasting project on (1) French-Russian relationships in Biology (and more specifically Neuroscience), (2) the history of the neurosciences as part of a European conference project with FENS organised at ICM (December 3-4 2015), (3) the history of degenerative diseases with the interdisciplinary ANR project on deep brain stimulation (Sonia Canselier), and (4) a project on Louis Lapicque with the P.I. Nixon Medical Historical Library and the UT Health Science Center Digital Archive Purpose of the University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio, 7703 Floyd Curl Drive San Antonio, TX 78229.

Election

Claude Debru was elected at the French Academy of sciences on March 11, 2011.

http://www.academie-sciences.fr/academie/membre/Debru_Claude.htm

2015 events

Meeting, From the history of the neurosciences to future neuropyschiatry

ICM Amphitheatre, Institut du Cerveau et de la Moelle, Pitié Salpêtrière, December 3-4 2015.

Organisation: FENS, CHN, ICM, Laboratoire SPHERE (Université Paris-Diderot): Yves Agid, Jean-Gaël Barbara, Laura Bossi, Céline Chérici, Jean-Claude Dupont.

Meeting of the Club d'histoire des neurosciences on the history of degeneration for the ANR “Normastim”, Thursday March 26th 2015, 12 am - 3 pm, laboratoire Neurosciences Paris Seine, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Building B, Room 501. Laura Bossi: neurodegeneraive models and therapeutical approaches; Jean-Gaël Barbara: Debates on neurodegeneration between physiology, experimental pathology, clinical studies and the anatomopathology of nervous diseases in the 19th c.

Presentation by the Club d'histoire des neurosciences to the interdisciplinary meeting of ANR NormaStim on Deep brain stimulation. Monday 12 January, Université Paris Descartes. J.-G. Barbara, C. Cherici and J.-C. Dupont, From past explorations of the nervous system to neurodegenerative diseases.

2014 events

No meeting in 2014 following the decease of Pierre Buser and Yves Galifret

2013 events

Jacques Taxi gave a lecture on “The Contribution of Electron Microscopy to Neuroscience”, Thursday July 4th, 12:30, Room B501, laboratoire de neurobiologie des processus adaptatifs, building B, UPMC.

2012 events

Third French-Russian GDRI CNRS meeting on the history of the neurosciences : Russian-French-German Links in Embryology, Physiology and Medicine, 14 juin 2012.
Meeting organised by Prof. Eduard Kolchinsky – Chair of the St. Petersburg branch Institute for the history of science and technology of the Russian Academy of Sciences – and member of the Groupe de Recherche Internationale Franco-Russe du CNRS (GDRI) directed by Jean-Gaël Barbara (CNRS, CHN) and Alexander Frolov (Institute of the Higher Nervous Activity, Moscow).

Session 25, The next science of humankind. Myths and histories of the Neurosciences, coordinated & chaired by Jean-Gaël Barbara and Fabio de Sio at the 5th Conference of the European Society for the History of Science, Athens, November 1-3 2012, National Hellenic Research Foundation, Marasleios Academy, Byzantine and Christian Museum.

2011 events

Second Meeting of the French-Russian GDRI CNRS on the history of the neurosciences : Russian-French Links in Biology and Medicine Saint-Pétersbourg, 13-14 septembre 2011.

Meeting organised by Prof. Eduard Kolchinsky – Chair of the St. Petersburg branch Institute for the history of science and technology of the Russian Academy of Sciences – and member of the Groupe de Recherche Internationale Franco-Russe du CNRS (GDRI) directed by Jean-Gaël Barbara (CNRS, CHN) and Alexander Frolov (Institute of the Higher Nervous Activity, Moscow).

2010 events

- No meeting took place in 2010 due to many international events organised by the Club that year.

Fifth Meeting
of the Club for the History of the Neurosciences

Friday 13 November, 2009 (11 :00 am – 5 :00 pm),
Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris 6
Laboratoire de Neurobiologie des Processus Adaptatifs
UMR CNRS 7102, 7, quai Saint Bernard

The meeting was organised by Jean-Gaël Barbara, André Calas and François Clarac. Speakers were invited to present neuroscientists from Bordeaux (France) : Jacques Battin (Bordeaux, Member of the national Academy of medicine) : “Neuropsychiatry in Bordeaux: elder masters until today” ; Jan Pieter Konsman (Bordeaux) : “François Magendie” ; André Calas (Bordeaux, Emeritus CNRS Research Director CNRS) : “Pioneers in Neuroendocrinology in Bordeaux” ; François Clarac (Marseilles, Emeritus CNRS Research Director CNRS) : “From P. Delmas Marsalet to neuronal networks” ; Jean-Gaël Barbara (Paris, CNRS) : “The laboratory of Arcachon, Alfred Fessard, studies on torpedo fish and aplysia ».

Fourth Meeting
of the Club for the History of the Neurosciences

Thursday June 4th, 2009 (2:00 pm – 4:00 pm)
Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris 6
Laboratoire de Neurobiologie des Processus Adaptatifs
UMR CNRS 7102, 7, quai Saint Bernard

Thibaud Trochu (EXeCO Team, Experience and Cognition, Paris 1 university) presented his original work on William James (1842-1910) concerning the philosophical position of James on the mind-brain problem. He discussed the medical and scientific background of James upon which his philosophy was built.

Third Meeting
of the Club for the History of the Neurosciences

Wednesday May 7th, 2008 (2:00 pm – 5:00 pm)
Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris 6
Laboratoire de Neurobiologie des Processus Adaptatifs
UMR CNRS 7102, 7, quai Saint Bernard

Program
Denis Forest History of Aphasia  
Jacques Taxi The scientific work of Jean Nageotte (1866-1948)

Paper

Andrée Tixier-Vidal The discovery of the Golgi apparatus  

Second Meeting
of the Club for the History of the Neurosciences

Thursday October 11th, 2007
Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris 6
Laboratoire de Neurobiologie des Processus Adaptatifs
UMR CNRS 7102, 7, quai Saint Bernard
Bâtiment B, 5ème étage, Salle 501.


Contact : Jean-Gaël Barbara,
jean-gael.barbara@snv.jussieu.fr 

Program

François Clarac
(Emeritus CNRS Research Director)

Jean-Martin Charcot and lateral amyotrophic sclerosis (SLA)
Jacques Poirier
(M.D., Professor at the Salpêtrière hospital)
The work of Jospeh Babinski

Summary of the paper

First Meeting
of the Club for the History of the Neurosciences

Thursday June 15th, 2006 (9 :30 am – 4 :00 pm)
Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris 6
Laboratoire de Neurobiologie des Processus Adaptatifs
UMR CNRS 7102,
7, quai Saint Bernard
Bâtiment B, 5ème étage, Salle 501.

Contact : Jean-Gaël Barbara, jean-gael.barbara@snv.jussieu.fr

The Club for the History of the Neurosciences is one of the official clubs of the Neuroscience Society (France). Members have informal meetings on special themes. Other clubs include those on attention, blood-brain barrier, glial cells, prefrontal cortex, neuronal networks, epilepsy, exocytosis and endocytosis, basic ganglia, locomotion and rhythmic motor activities, motoneurones, neurobiology of invertebrates, neuroprotection, cognitive psychophysiology and the autonomous system.

The list of members include Jean-Gaël Barbara, Alain Berthoz, Pierre Buser, Alexandre Bouron, André Calas, Céline Cherici, Guy Chouvet, François Clarac, Rafael De Armas Pereira, Claude Debru, Jean-Claude Dupont , Liliana Garcia, Fabrice Gzil, Philippe Isope, Maurice Israël, Marc Jeannerod, François Jourdan, Isabelle Le Brun, Jean-Claude Lecas, Jean Mariani, Jacques Paillard, Olivier Pierrefiche , Bernard Poulain, Monique Rogard, David Romand, Laure Rondi, David Sander, Andrée Tixier, Danièle Tritsch, Patrice Venault, François Jourdan.

Program
09:30 Opening of the meeting  
1st session
10:00-10:20 André Calas Every neuron has a shape : neurones in the history of the neurosciences
10:20-10:40 François Clarac Commentary on the article of Alfred Fessard (1931) on Nervous rhythms and relaxation oscillations.
Break    
11:00-11:20 Suzanne Tyc-Dumont The unknown territories of dendritic arborisation and why should we make models ?
11:20-11:40 Andrée Tixier-Vidal The history of the pituitary gland : form and function
11:40-12:00 Maurice Israël The history of an Egyptian medical prescription
Lunch
2nd session
14:00-14:20 Céline Cherici Antoine Rémond (1917-1998) and EEG in Paris
14:20-14:40 Fabrice Gzil The invention of Alzheimer's disease
14:40-15:00 Jean-claude Lecas The behaviourist origins of neuroscience
Break

15:15

General Assembly of the Club, discussion on future activities
 

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