Edgar
Douglas Adrian was born on November 30, 1889, in London. He was the second
son of Alfred Douglas Adrian, C.B., K.C., legal adviser to the British Local
Government Board. Adrian went to school at Westminster School, London, and in
1908 he went to Trinity
>College, Cambridge, at which College he had won a Scholarship
in Science. At Cambridge University he studied physiology and the other subjects
of the Natural Sciences Tripos and in 1911 he took his B.A. degree with first
classes in five separate subjects.
In 1913 he was elected to a Fellowship of Trinity College on account of his
investigation of the «all or none» principle in nerve. He then studied
medicine, doing his clinical work at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London, and
taking his medical degree in 1915. After working for a time on clinical neurology,
he returned to Cambridge in 1919, to lecture on the nervous system. He was made
Fellow of the Royal Society in 1923. In 1925 he began investigating the sense
organs by electrical methods.
In 1929 he was elected Foulerton
Professor of the Royal Society. In 1937 he
succeeded Sir Joseph Barcroft as Professor of Physiology at the University of
Cambridge, a post which he held until 1951.
In 1951 Adrian was elected Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, a post which
he still, at the time of
writing, holds.
When Adrian graduated at Cambridge, the Department of Physiology there included
several distinguished research workers. Among them were J. N. Langley (1852-1925),
who had succeeded Sir Michael Foster (1836-1907), W. H. Gaskeh (1847-1914),
Sir Hugh K. Anderson (1865-1928), Sir Walter Morley Fletcher (1873-1933), Sir
Joseph Barcroft (1872-1947), Keith Lucas (1879-1916) and Archibald Vivian Hill
(b. 1886) who was then beginning his work on heat production in muscle. Sir
Frederick Gowland Hopkins (1861-1947) was then doing his pioneer work on the
vitamins.
Adrian's first research work was
done with Keith Lucas, who was working on the
impulses transmitted by motor nerves; he showed that, when a muscle fibre contracts,
the passage of the nerve impulse that causes the contractions leaves the motor
nerve in a state of diminished excitability. Keith Lucas was, at the time of
the First World War, thinking of improving the study of the electrical currents
in nerves by amplifying them by means of valves, a method which Adrian was later
to employ.
First, however, Adrian went to
London to take his medical degree and was, until
the end of the First World War occupied with work on military patients suffering
from nerve injuries or nervous disorders. Returning to Cambridge in 1919 to
take over Keith Lucas's laboratory, he
began the work with which his name will
always be associated. In order to obtain a more sensitive detection of nerve
impulses, he used the cathode ray tube, the capillary electrometer and amplification
of the electrical impulses by means of thermionic valves, and was thus able
to amplify them 5,000 times. He succeeded in setting up a preparation consisting
of a single end organ in a muscle of the frog, together with the single nerve
fibre related to it and he found that, when the end organ is stimulated, the
nerve fibre showed regular impulses with a variable frequency.
With this apparatus he was able to record the electrical discharges in single
nerve fibres which were produced by tension on the muscle, pressure on it, touch,
the movement of a hair and pricking with a needle. By 1928 he was able to publish
his conclusion that a stimulus of constant intensity applied to the skin, immediately
excites the end organ, but that this excitation progressively decreases for
as long as the stimulation continues. At the same time sensory impulses of constant
intensity pass along the nerve from the end organ. These sensory impulses are
at first very frequent, but their frequency gradually decreases and as they
decrease the sensation in the brain progressively diminishes. As A. V. Hill
(The Ethical Dilemma of Science, 1960) has said, Adrian, by thus showing that
the afferent effect in a given neurone depends on the pattern in time of the
impulses travelling in it, has provided a new quantitative basis of nervous
behaviour.
Later Adrian extended his
investigations to a study of the electrical impulses
caused by stimuli likely to cause pain, he concluded that, as Sir Henry Head
had postulated as a result of his clinical studies, the nerve fibres which conduct
impulses excited by pain probably do not pass further into the brain than the
optic thalamus, but that all other sensory impulses can be distinguished in
the sensory area of the cortex of the brain and he showed that the part of the
cerebral cortex devoted to any
particular kind of end organ is related to the
special needs of the animal concerned. Thus
in man and the monkey the sensory
area of the cerebral cortex devoted to the - Adrian Edgar Biography knot dog face and hand is Biography free - site Adrian rape Edgar relatively son Adrian and Biography - incest Edgar and mother Biography Edgar - Adrian Кабельна арматура - ВАЗ Edgar 2110 направленный Adrian Biography ткань 11 подиум 12 large,
little Edgar Biography Adrian - panties and relatively Adrian Biography - Edgar knot dog little is given to the trunk of the body. In the pony the area
devoted to the nostrils is as large as that devoted to the rest of the body;
in the pig almost the whole of the sensory area of the cerebral cortex devoted
to the sense of touch is given to fibres from the snout, which the pig uses
to explore its environment.
Subsequently, Adrian studied the sense of smell and the electrical activity
of the brain and the variations and abnormalities of waves shown in the encephalogram,
which Hans Berger, of Jena, had described in 1929. This work opened up new fields
of investigation in the study of epilepsy and other lesions of the brain.
For his work about the functions of neurones Adrian was awarded, jointly with
Sir Charles Sherrington, the Nobel Prize for 1932.
The results of Adrian's brilliant researches on the electrophysiology of the
brain and nervous system were published
in numerous scientific papers and in
his three books, The Basis of Sensation (1927), The Mechanism of Nervous
Action (1932) and The Physical Basis of Perception (1947). With others
he wrote Factors Determining Human Behaviour (1937).
Adrian had numerous honours bestowed upon him. During 1950-1955 he was President
of the Royal Society, and during 1960-1962 of the Royal Society of Medicine.
In 1954, he was President of the British Association for the Advancement of
Science. He is Chevalier of the French Legion of Honour and a trustee of the
Rockefeller Institute. He holds honorary degrees, memberships, and fellowships
of numerous universities and other learned bodies. He was knighted Baron of
Cambridge in 1955.
A man of tireless energy
industry, Adrian has, throughout his
busy life, and as a Member of the Medical Research Council and many other scientific
advisory bodies, exerted great influence, not only on his pupils and collaborators,
but also on the development of physiological research and the sciences in general.
To the citizens of Cambridge he has long been familiar as a lean, small figure,
dominated by the forward thrust of the nose and chin and the set expression
of purpose, as he threads his way at high speed on a bicycle through the crowded
streets of the city. An expert fencer, he is also an enthusiastic mountaineer,
a recreation which he shares with Lady Adrian, who is a Justice of the Peace
and does much social work in the City. Among Lord Adrian's other recreations
are sailing and his great interest in the arts. A superb after-dinner speaker,
all his lectures and speeches have been the result of very careful preparation.
In 1923 Adrian married Hester Agnes
Pinsent, daughter of the late Hume Pinsent
of Birmingham, England, and a descendant of the philosoper David Hume. They
have one son and two daughters.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1965
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
 
Edgar Adrian died on August 8, 1977.