Masters of Medicine!
Our website is dedicated to various masters of medicine!
American physiologist who was a cowinner (with George Wald and Ragnar Granit)
of the 1967 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work in analyzing the
neurophysiological mechanisms of vision.
Hartline began his study of retinal electrophysiology as a National Research
Council Fellow at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, receiving his M.D. in
1927. After attending the universities of Leipzig and Munich as an Eldridge
Johnson traveling research scholar, he became professor of biophysics and
chairman of the department at Johns Hopkins in 1949. He joined the staff of
Rockefeller University, New York City, in 1953 as professor of neurophysiology.
Hartline investigated the electrical responses of the retinas of certain
arthropods, vertebrates, and mollusks because their visual systems are much
simpler than those of humans and are thus easier to study. He concentrated his
studies on the eye of the horseshoe crab (Limulus polyphemus). Using minute
electrodes in his experiments, he obtained the first record of the electrical
impulses sent by a single optic nerve fibre when the receptors connected to it
are stimulated by light. He found that the receptor cells in the eye are
interconnected in such a way that when one is stimulated, others nearby are
depressed, thus enhancing the contrast in light patterns and sharpening the
perception of shapes. Hartline thus built up a detailed understanding of the
workings of individual photoreceptors and nerve fibres in the retina, and he
showed how simple retinal mechanisms constitute vital steps in the integration
of visual information.
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