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  1. Julius Bernstein (18 December 1839 – 6 February 1917) was a German physiologist born in Berlin. His father was Aron Bernstein (1812–1884), a founder of the Reform Judaism Congregation in Berlin 1845; his son was the mathematician Felix Bernstein (1878–1956).

  2. Julius Bernstein belonged to the Berlin school of "organic physicists" who played a prominent role in creating modern physiology and biophysics during the second half of the nineteenth century.

    • Ernst-August Seyfarth
    • 2005
  3. In 1902, Julius Bernstein postulated that nerve impulses represented a temporary "breakdown" of the membrane resistance. In this view, the peak of the action potential represented the point of minimum resistance (or maximum conductance) and thus would simply approach zero millivolts.

    • Julius Bernstein1
    • Julius Bernstein2
    • Julius Bernstein3
    • Julius Bernstein4
    • Julius Bernstein5
  4. BERNSTEIN, JULIUS (b. Berlin, Germany, 8 December 1839; d. Halle, Germany, 6 February 1917). phiysiology. Bernstein was the son of Aron Bernstein, a Jewish theologian, author, and politician from Danzig.

  5. This article aims at illustrating the historical circumstances that led Julius Bernstein in 1902 to formulate a membrane theory on resting current in muscle and nerve fibers.

    • Armando De Palma, Germana Pareti
    • 2011
  6. The historical circumstances that led Julius Bernstein in 1902 to formulate a membrane theory on resting current in muscle and nerve fibers are illustrated to illustrate the truly paradigm shift in research into bioelectrical phenomena.

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  8. Feb 1, 2006 · Julius Bernstein, with the help of Emil du Bois-Reymond, found a way to overcome these technical limitations and in about 1865 made the first recordings of the time course of the action potential.

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