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  1. Bartolomeo Camillo Emilio Golgi (ur. 7 lipca 1843 w Corteno, zm. 21 stycznia 1926 w Pawii) – włoski lekarz patolog, profesor Uniwersytetu w Pawii, laureat Nagrody Nobla w dziedzinie fizjologii lub medycyny (1906), wspólnie z Santiago Ramónem y Cajalem.

  2. Camillo Golgi (Italian: [kaˈmillo ˈɡɔldʒi]; 7 July 1843 – 21 January 1926) was an Italian biologist and pathologist known for his works on the central nervous system. He studied medicine at the University of Pavia (where he later spent most of his professional career) between 1860 and 1868 under the tutelage of Cesare Lombroso.

  3. Camillo Golgi was an extraordinary scientist whose contributions in the domain of neuroanatomy proved to be critical for emergence of neuroscience as a sovereign scientific discipline. Golgi’s invention of the Black Reaction (La reazione nera) was a ...

  4. 12 lut 2011 · Golgi was an archetypal Italian academician: adept in wielding power on university appointment panels and the editorial boards of scientific journals through the reciprocating engine of patronage and loyalty.

  5. Engagingly written, in well-referenced short chapters, the biography opens with Golgi’s familial roots and his intellectual forbears in the university city of Pavia, Italy, the ancient regional capital of Lombardy.

  6. 20 kwi 1998 · The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1906 was awarded jointly to Camillo Golgi and Santiago Ramón y Cajal "in recognition of their work on the structure of the nervous system"

  7. Figure 3: Camillo Golgi in 1875. In 1878 he described two kinds of tendinous sensory corpuscles: the Golgi tendon organ (Figure 4) (proprioceptors) and the Golgi-Mazzoni corpuscles (transductor of pressure stimuli). Then he invented the staining method with potassium dichromate and mercuric chloride (1878-79),

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