General Neurochemical Techniques (neuromethods)
by Alan A. Boulton /
1986 / English / PDF
41.3 MB Download
Techniques in the neurosciences are evolving rapidly. There are
currently very few volumes dedicated to the methodology - ployed by
neuroscientists, and those that are available often seem either out
of date or limited in scope. This series IS about the methods most
widely used by modern-day neuroscientists and is written by their
colleagues who are practicing experts. Volume 1 will be useful to
all neuroscientists since it concerns those procedures used
routmely across the widest range of s- disciplines. Collecting
these general techniques together in a s- gle volume strikes us not
only as a service, but will no doubt prove of exceptional
utilitarian value as well. Volumes 2 and 3 - scribe current
procedures for the analyses of amines and their - tabolites and of
amino acids, respectively. These collections will clearly be of
value to all neuroscientists working in or contempl- ing research
in these fields. Similar reasons exist for Volume 4 on receptor
binding techniques since experimental details are p- vided for many
types of ligand-receptor binding, including ch- ters on general
principles, drug discovery and development, and a most useful
appendix on computer programs for Scatchard, nonlinear and
competitive displacement analyses. Volume 5 p- vides procedures for
the assessment of enzymes involved in biogenic amine synthesis and
catabolism. Volumes in the NEUROMETHODS series will be useful to
neuro-chemists, -pharmacologists, -physiologists, -anatomists,
psychopharmacologists, psychiatrists, neurologists, and chemists
(organic, analytical, pharmaceutical, medicinal); in fact, everyone
involved in the neurosciences, both basic and clinical.
Techniques in the neurosciences are evolving rapidly. There are
currently very few volumes dedicated to the methodology - ployed by
neuroscientists, and those that are available often seem either out
of date or limited in scope. This series IS about the methods most
widely used by modern-day neuroscientists and is written by their
colleagues who are practicing experts. Volume 1 will be useful to
all neuroscientists since it concerns those procedures used
routmely across the widest range of s- disciplines. Collecting
these general techniques together in a s- gle volume strikes us not
only as a service, but will no doubt prove of exceptional
utilitarian value as well. Volumes 2 and 3 - scribe current
procedures for the analyses of amines and their - tabolites and of
amino acids, respectively. These collections will clearly be of
value to all neuroscientists working in or contempl- ing research
in these fields. Similar reasons exist for Volume 4 on receptor
binding techniques since experimental details are p- vided for many
types of ligand-receptor binding, including ch- ters on general
principles, drug discovery and development, and a most useful
appendix on computer programs for Scatchard, nonlinear and
competitive displacement analyses. Volume 5 p- vides procedures for
the assessment of enzymes involved in biogenic amine synthesis and
catabolism. Volumes in the NEUROMETHODS series will be useful to
neuro-chemists, -pharmacologists, -physiologists, -anatomists,
psychopharmacologists, psychiatrists, neurologists, and chemists
(organic, analytical, pharmaceutical, medicinal); in fact, everyone
involved in the neurosciences, both basic and clinical.