Frederick C. Kenyon
Frederick Courtland Kenyon | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 11 January 1941 | (aged 73)
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | University of Nebraska-Lincoln Tufts University |
Known for | Kenyon cells |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Zoology, Anatomy |
Institutions | Clark University |
Author abbrev. (zoology) | F. C. Kenyon |
Frederick Courtland Kenyon (November 22, 1867 – January 11, 1941) was an American zoologist and anatomist, the first person to research the inner anatomy of the insect brain. In 1896, he published a paper in which he described for the first time the neurons in the mushroom bodies of the honey bee. Later, the same neurons were discovered in other insects and were called Kenyon cells.
Frederick C. Kenyon was born in Hartford, Connecticut, the son of a shoe merchant. In 1887, he moved with his family to Lincoln, Nebraska, where in 1893 he received a bachelor's degree from the State University. He received his doctorate in 1895 from Tufts University, where he studied Pauropoda centipedes. He worked for about two years at Clark University, where, in 1896, he prepared his famous work on the mushroom bodies of the honey bee.[1]
With extremely finely-detailed drawings, he was the first scientist to find and characterize within any organism identifiable classes of neuron types linked to particular areas of the brain. He correctly suggested that there were tens of thousands of the eponymous cells he'd discovered for each mushroom body and that the bodies were the site of multisensory integration.[2]
In his early thirties he began to display strange behavior, and on November 25, 1899, he was committed to a psychiatric hospital in Washington, D.C., where he remained, seemingly without the possibility of rehabilitation, for over forty-one years.[3][2]
References
[edit]- ^ Kenyon, F. C. (1896). "The brain of the bee. A preliminary contribution to the morphology of the nervous system of the arthropoda". Journal of Comparative Neurology. 6 (3): 133–210. doi:10.1002/cne.910060302.
- ^ a b Chittka, Lars (2022). The Mind of a Bee. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press. pp. 147–149.
- ^ Nicholas James Strausfeld, Arthropod Brains: Evolution, Functional Elegance, and Historical Significance, pp. 55-61, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA (2012)
This article was created by translating the equivalent article on the Russian Wikipedia on 19 January 2022.