http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c85m6cwr No online items UCLA Neuroscience History Archives Oral History Collection Biomed.0415 Finding aid prepared by UCLA Biomedical Library staff, 2015. UCLA Library Special Collections Online finding aid last updated 2020 December 1. Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA 90095-1575 [email protected] URL: https://www.library.ucla.edu/special-collections UCLA Neuroscience History Biomed.0415 1 Archives Oral History Collection Biomed.0415 Contributing Institution: UCLA Library Special Collections Title: UCLA Neuroscience History Archives Oral History Collection Creator: Marshall, Louise H. (Louise Hanson) Identifier/Call Number: Biomed.0415 Physical Description: 9.8 Linear Feet(2 boxes, 9 cartons) Date (inclusive): circa 1980-2000 Language of Material: Materials are primarily in English. Conditions Governing Access Unprocessed collection. Material is unavailable for access. Please contact Special Collections reference ([email protected]) for more information. Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements CONTAINS UNPROCESSED AUDIO MATERIALS: Audio materials are not currently available for access and will require further processing and assessment. If you have questions about this material please email [email protected]. Processing Information Collections are processed to a variety of levels depending on the work necessary to make them usable, their perceived user interest and research value, availability of staff and resources, and competing priorities. Library Special Collections provides a standard level of preservation and access for all collections and, when time and resources permit, conducts more intensive processing. These materials have been arranged and described according to national and local standards and best practices. Processed by UCLA Biomedical Library staff, 2015. UCLA Catalog Record ID UCLA Catalog Record ID: 8013260 Scope and Contents Collection contains interview transcripts and recordings from oral history interviews with staff of the Los Angeles Early School of Neurology and UCLA Brain Research Institute, as well as contributors to the development of neuroscience. Los Angeles Early School of Neurology. Series 1. Scope and Contents note A major incentive for interviewing these thirteen individuals was to gather material specific to the local history of the development of neurology, with a major focus being the Southern California development of split-brain surgery in humans as a treatment for epilepsy, and the ensuing progress in the study of brain lateralization. Some of this material was utilized in an exhibit the Neuroscience History Resource Project at UCLA displayed at the 1985 annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology in San Diego, California. Arrangement note Alphabetical by name of interviewee Amyes, Edwin W. , MD, oral history interview (January 14, 1981). Subseries 1. Physical Description: 3 folders Arrangement note The interview took place at the UCLA Faculty Club with Drs. John French, Horace Magoun, Dr. Louise Marshall, Ynez O'Neill, and Frances Brewer in attendance, and was recorded on two audiocassette tapes (ca. 2 hrs.). Scope and Contents note Dr. Amyes (1921-2014) a neurosurgeon with psychiatric training, provided valuable information and insight about the development of neurology and neurosurgery in Los Angeles. He graduated from Loma Linda University College of Adventist Medial Evangelists in 1943, and during his internship, residency, and practice as surgeon and teacher interacted with the major figures developing the neurosciences in the area. UCLA Neuroscience History Biomed.0415 2 Archives Oral History Collection Biomed.0415 Los Angeles Early School of Neurology. Series 1. Amyes, Edwin W. , MD, oral history interview (January 14, 1981). Subseries 1. box 1, folder 1 Edwin W. Amyes oral history interview: final transcript. 1981 Jan 14 Scope and Contents note 40 p., with detailed table-of-contents box 1, folder 2 Edwin W. Amyes oral history interview: transcript drafts. Scope and Contents note initial transcript and one revision box 1, folder 3 Edwin W. Amyes oral history interview: correspondence. 1981-1983 Bogen, Joseph E., MD, oral history interview (June 6, August 22, October 12, 1981). Subseries 2. Physical Description: 4 folders Arrangement note The first interview took place at the Ross-Loos Clinic, Pasadena, with Louise Marshall and Frances Brewer; the second interview took place at the New Hope Pain Center, Alhambra, with Dr. Louise Marshall and Frances Brewer; the third interview was an after-dinner conversation (unspecified location) with Glenda Bogen, H.W. Magoun, Evelyn Satinoff (Mrs. Philip Teitlebaum), Frances Brewer, and Richard Brewer. These were recorded on six audiocassette tapes (ca. 6 hrs). Scope and Contents note Dr. Bogen (1926-2005) was a man with broad interests and experience -- neurophysiology, neuropsychology, psychiatry, philosophy of mind, and neurosurgery, in which he became Board certified; he called himself a neuroeclectic. During his long service at Caltech and White Memorial Hospital he made crucial contributions to the development of commissurotomy as a treatment for some types of epilepsy, and furthered research in brain lateralization. In 1981 he moved to the New Hope Pain Center at Alhambra Community Hospital, to apply his broad experience to the study of pain. Later his interest shifted to exploring theories of consciousness and its localization in the brain. Dr. Bogen taught at Caltech, USC, and UCLA. box 1, folder 4 Joseph E. Bogen oral history interview: final transcript. Scope and Contents note 92p., with detailed table-of-contents box 1, folder 5 Joseph E. Bogen oral history interview: transcript draft. Scope and Contents note first draft box 1, folder 6 Joseph E. Bogen oral history interview: transcript draft. Scope and Contents note second transcription, edited by Dr. Bogen box 1, folder 7 Joseph E. Bogen oral history interview: correspondence and background material. 1976-1984 Scope and Contents note correspondence; photograph; notes UCLA Neuroscience History Biomed.0415 3 Archives Oral History Collection Biomed.0415 Los Angeles Early School of Neurology. Series 1. Gazzaniga, Michael S., PhD, oral history interview (October 21, 1981). Subseries 3. Gazzaniga, Michael S., PhD, oral history interview (October 21, 1981). Subseries 3. Physical Description: 3 folders Arrangement note The interview took place at the Los Angeles Convention Center during a meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, was conducted the Frances Brewer and Dr. Louise Marshall, and was recorded on two audiocassette tapes (ca. 1.5 hrs). Scope and Contents note Dr. Gazzaniga (1939- ), professor of psychology at the University of California, Santa Barbara, is Director of its SAGE Center for the Study of the Mind. As a Ph.D. student in psychobiology under Roger Sperry at California Institute of Technology (Caltech), he participated in the original studies of brain function and lateralization in split brain patients. He continued these inquiries throughout his subsequent career and has made major advances in understanding of functional lateralization in the brain and the communication between cerebral hemispheres. Dr. Gazzaniga is one of six founders of the Cognitive Neuroscience Society, and is a member of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, the Institute of Medicine, and the National Academy of Sciences. box 1, folder 8 Michael S. Gazzaniga oral history interview: final transcript. Scope and Contents note 15 p., with detailed table-of-contents Michael S. Gazzaniga oral history interview: transcript drafts. Scope and Contents note two drafts, second edited by Dr. Gazzaniga General note RESTRICTED box 1, folder 9 Michael S. Gazzaniga oral history interview: correspondence. 1982-1986 Ingham, Harrington Vose, MD, oral history interview (December 15, 1981). Subseries 4. Physical Description: 3 folders Arrangement note The interview took place at the UCLA Center for Health Sciences, was conducted by Frances Brewer, and was recorded on one audiocassette tape (ca. 0.75 hrs.). Scope and Contents note Dr. Harrington Ingham (1914-1995), a psychiatrist, received his MD from the University of Southern California, went east for a neurological residency at Bellevue Hospital, New York, and then for psychiatric residencies at Bellevue and the Psychiatric Institute of Columbia University. He returned to Los Angeles after his World War II service where, in 1955, he and his co-author Joseph Luft devised a new cognitive psychology tool, the "Johari Window", for elucidating an individual's personality and relationships. At the time of this interview, Dr. Ingham was the Director of the Student Mental Health Clinic at UCLA. The interview focused largely on Dr. Samuel D. Ingham (1876-1966), Harrington's Ingham's father, an important neurologist in early 20th century Los Angeles neuroscience, and on Samuel Ingham's associates, Drs. Johannes Nielsen and Carl Rand. box 1, folder 10 Harrington V. Ingham oral history interview: final transcript. Scope and Contents note 30p., with detailed table-of-contents box 1, folder 11 Harrington V. Ingham oral history interview: transcript drafts. Scope and Contents note two drafts, second edited by Dr. Ingham UCLA Neuroscience History Biomed.0415 4 Archives Oral History Collection Biomed.0415 Los Angeles Early School of Neurology. Series 1. Ingham, Harrington Vose, MD, oral history interview (December 15, 1981). Subseries 4. box
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