Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Rudolf Albert von Kölliker (1817-1905) was a Swiss anatomist, physiologist, and histologist who made significant contributions to the fields of anatomy, embr...

    • 3 min
    • 42
    • MBBS NAIJA
    • Background Rudolph Albert Kölliker
    • Embriology
    • Histology

    Rudolph Albert Kölliker was born in Zurich, Switzerland. His early education was carried on in Zurich, and he entered the university there in 1836. After two years, however, he moved to the University of Bonn, and later to that of Berlin, becoming a pupil of noted physiologists Johannes Peter Müller and of Friedrich Gustav Jakob Henle. He graduated...

    Kölliker made substantial contributions to the study of zoology. While his earlier efforts were directed to the invertebrates, he soon passed on to the vertebrates, and studied the amphibians and mammalian embryos. He was among the first, if not the very first, to introduce into this branch of biological inquiry the newer microscopic technique the ...

    But neither zoology nor embryology furnished Kölliker’s chief claim to fame. He is best known for his contributions to histology, the knowledge of the minute structure of the animal tissues. Among his earlier results was the demonstration in 1847 that smooth or unstriated muscle is made up of distinct units, of nucleated muscle cells. In this work,...

  2. People also ask

  3. Rudolf Albert von Kölliker (born July 6, 1817, Zürich, Switz.—died Nov. 2, 1905, Würzburg, Ger.) was a Swiss embryologist and histologist, one of the first to interpret tissue structure in terms of cellular elements. Kölliker became professor of physiology and comparative anatomy at the University of Zürich in 1844; in 1847 he ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Albert von Kölliker (born Rudolf Albert Kölliker; 6 July 1817 – 2 November 1905) was a Swiss anatomist, physiologist, and histologist. Biography [ edit ] Albert Kölliker was born in Zürich , Switzerland .

    • Swiss
  5. The Discovery and Naming of the Neuron ... his presentation in Germany convinced the extremely influential Swiss histologist Rudolf Albert von Kölliker to abandon any notion of the reticulum ...

  6. Rudolf von Kölliker. (6 Jul 1817 - 2 Nov 1905) Swiss anatomist, physiologist and histologist who was one of the founders of embryology. His thorough microscopic work on tissues enabled him to be among the first to identify their structure as being made from component cells that developed from existing cells.

  7. The contribution of Rudolf Albert von Kölliker (1817-1905), professor of physiology and comparative anatomy at the University of Würzburg, to our understanding of the nervous system lies in his observations on histology, or cellular structure, and lead directly to the findings of Cajal and Sherrington Scott. Nerve axons and their neurolemma ...

  1. People also search for