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Nobel prizes and life sciences [electronic resource]

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The Nobel Prizes in natural sciences have developed to become a unique measure of scientific excellence. Using archival documents, which have been released (50 years secrecy) for scholarly work, the author expertly traces the strengths and weaknesses of the Nobel system as exemplified by individual prizes. Surveys of the more than 100 years that the Prizes have been awarded are also presented. This book discusses the most important prize in the world of science and gives unique historical insights into how the laureate selection process has developed to secure optimal choice. No other book has

العنوان Nobel prizes and life sciences [electronic resource] / Erling Norrby.
الطبعة 1st ed.
الناشر Singapore
Hackensack : World Scientific
تاريخ الإصدار c2010
ملاحظات Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 281-298) and indexes.
English
رقم الرف CONTENTS
Preface
Chapter 1
More than a Century of Nobel Prizes
Alfred Nobel and his life
Academies and prizes
The will
Implementation of the will
The selection process
The awarding institutions and the prizes
The secrecy of the prize selection process
The number of prize recipients
The nationality of Nobel Prize recipients
The awardee and the prize
There is no Nobel Prize in economics
The enigmatic concept of discovery
Coda - Alfred Nobel's surprise
Chapter 2
Serendipity and Nobel Prizes
The origin of "serendipity"
Horace Walpole
Serendipity and scientific endeavor
Serendipitous events in scienceThe magic of invisible rays
Patterns of background radiation
The "vital force" of Nature dismissed
Helpful students' mistakes
From observational to evidence-based medicine
The paradigm example of a serendipitous finding?
The discovery of infectious agents in a remarkable context
"Serendipity" - From arcane to en vogue
What's in a word?
The capricious nature of the scientific process
Coda - Minute infectious agents
Chapter 3
Nobel Prizes and the Emerging Virus Concept
Nobel Prizes in the field of virology
Nobel archives and the evolving virus conceptThe first Nobel Prize in virology: Wendell Stanley
Stanley's findings and the discussions of infectious proteins
Bacteriophage replication and the studies of genes
Animal viruses and the understanding of the nature of viruses
The final synthesis of the virus concept
A counterfactual history of virology
Virology 50 years later
Coda - Are viruses live or dead material?
Chapter 4
The Only Nobel Prize for a Virus Vaccine:Yellow Fever and Max Theiler
The disease and the epidemics
The virus and possibilities for vaccine development
Max Theiler, the experimental scientistThe first deliberations by the Nobel Committee
Theiler's road toward the critical discovery
Continued deliberations by the Nobel Committee
The history of viral vaccines
What is a discovery?
A charming encounter
Coda - Sven Gard's return
Chapter 5
Polio and Nobel Prizes
Polio epidemics in the 20th century
Initial attempts to produce a vaccine
Early deliberations by the Nobel Committee
Enders, viruses and cultured cells
Sven Gard and his role
Nomination of Enders in 1952
Nominations of Enders and collaborators in 1953 and 1954
The decision
Polio research and vaccine productionWhy not wait for the first vaccine trials?
Coda - A unique contact
Chapter 6
Unusual Nobel Prizes in Physiology or Medicine
The first Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
The enigma of Alexis Carrel
The rapid advance toward a Nobel Prize
Eternal life in cultures
Carrel's engagement during the two world wars
Did Carrel's scientific contributions motivate his Nobel Prize in 1912?
The importance of friendship across the Kattegat
The attraction of contraction
Powerful developments in a subfield of physiology
Embden never received a Nobel Prize
Insulin, its remarkable discovery and a much debated Nobel Prize
الشكل 1 online resource (334 p.)
اللغة الانكليزية
رقم النظام 997010713302905171
MARC RECORDS

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