Part I: Introduction and biographies 1: David H. Hubel 2: Torsten N. Wiesel Part II: Background to our research 3: Cortical neurophysiology in the 1950's 4: The group at Hopkins 5: The move from Hopkins to Harvard 6: The new department Part III: Normal Physiology and Anatomy 7: Our first paper, on cat cortex, 1959 8: Recordings from fibers in the monkey optic nerve 9: Recordings from cells in the cat lateral geniculate 10: Our major paper on cat striate cortex, 1962 11: Recordings from the cat prestriate areas, 18 and 19 12: Survey of the monkey lateral geniculate body - a foray into colour 13: Recording fibers in the cat corpus collosum 14: Recordings in monkey striate cortex, 1968 15: Another visual representation, the cat Clare-Bishop area 16 Encoding of binocular depth in a cortical area in the monkey: 17: Anatomy of the geniculo-cortical pathway: the Nauta method 18: Ocular dominance columns revealed by autoradiography 19: Regular sequences of orientation shifts in monkeys 20: Cortical modules and magnification in monkeys Part IV: Deprivation and development 21: The first three kitten deprivation papers 22: The second group of deprivation papers 23: The siamese cat 24: Cells grouped in orientation columns in newborn monkeys 25: Plasticity and development of monkeys ocular dominance columns Part V: Three reviews 26: Ferrier lecture, 1977 27: Nobel lecture, David H. Hubel, 1981 Nobel lecture, Torsten N. Wiesel, 1981 28: Epilogue: summing up List of papers included Glossary Index Today, 46 years after starting
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