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  1. Elizabeth Roboz Einstein, (1904-1995) OnJanuary 9, 1995, Dr.Elizabeth Roboz Einstein effects ofthyroid hormones onmyelinogenesis: the dem-died in Berkeley, California, at hehome she had shared onstration that these hormones influence theonset, com-for many years with her late husband, Dr.Hans Albert position, and amount ofmyelin inthe ...

  2. Nov 22, 1991 · Hans Albert Einstein. Reminiscences of His Life and Our Life Together. Elizabeth Roboz Einstein. Iowa Institute of Hydraulic Research, University of Iowa, Iowa City, 1991. xvi, 112 pp., illus. Paper, $12.50.. Science 254, 1236-1236 (1991). DOI:10.1126/science.254.5035.1236.a

  3. Oct 24, 2018 · Elizabeth Roboz-Einstein (1904-1995) was a pioneer in the field of neurochemistry who identified a key component of the coating called myelin that insulates nerves. Yes, she was also the wife of Albert Einstein's first son, Hans, but she didn't escape World War II and dedicate her life to research in order to be known as a wife.

  4. Home. Neurochemical Research. Article. Elizabeth Roboz Einstein, (1904–1995) Remembrance. Published: July 1995. Volume 20 , page 885, ( 1995 ) Cite this article. Download PDF. Paola S. Timiras. 35 Accesses. 3 Altmetric. Explore all metrics. Article PDF. Author information. Authors and Affiliations.

  5. Summary. Biochemist and neuroscientist Elizabeth Roboz Einstein (1904-1995) had just left the Cornell University Sugar Research Foundation joined the Food Research Laboratory at Stanford Research Institute when Stanford University distributed this photograph.

  6. Dr. Elizabeth Roboz Einstein, Clinical Professor of Neurology, School of Medicine, was selected as one of the 10 Bay Area Distinguished Women of 1965 in the San Francisco Examiner's Seventh Annual Distinguished Women Nominations. On January 13, each woman received a Phoebe Apperson Hearst Gold Medallion during the Annual Award Luncheon. Dr.

  7. Elizabeth Roboz Einstein. 68 Accesses. 10 Citations. Abstract. Experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE) is a distinct form of autoimmune disease. It was produced as early as 1933 by repeated injection of brain emulsion into monkeys.