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Who was John J. Abel?

John
Jacob Abel (1857 -1938) received his PhD in physiology from Johns
Hopkins University and studied in Germany
under Carl Ludwig and Oswald Schmiedeberg. He returned to the
United States in 1891 to become Chair of the Department of Materia
Medica at the University of Michigan. At Michigan Abel
transformed the Department of Materia Medica into a department of
pharmacology, the first in the country. In 1893, Johns
Hopkins University was opening a new medical school and
recruited John J. Abel to be their first professor of pharmacology. John J. Abel
and eighteen of his colleagues founded the American Society of
Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics on December 28, 1908.
Abel was the first to isolate a blood pressure
raising substance from bovine adrenal glands (1897) which substance
he called "epinephrin." At the age of 68, he became the
first person to crystallize insulin (1925).
Thus, John J. Abel can be considered the Father
of Pharmacology in the U.S. as well as the founder of ASPET and the
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (JPET).
What's an Abel Number?
Well, if you were John Jacob Abel, your Abel
number would be 0.
If you published with J. J. Abel, your Abel
number would be 1.
If you published with someone who published with
J. J. Abel, your Abel number would be
2.
And so on. Help us
expand our list of Abel numbers! We have Abel numbers for over
5000 individuals. You can search our list
by Abel Number
or alphabetically. If your name is not on the list and
you recognize the name of someone you have published with, please
send that reference to David
Bylund so it can be included in our database and when this table
is updated online, your name and Abel number will be there!
You can pick up you Abel Number button at EB '08 by coming to the
ASPET booth or office.
What is an Abel Number
Button?
What does an Abel Number
show?
An Abel number is sort of a family tree
showing your pharmacological geneology. However, it also shows
the impact that you can have on a scientific discipline and on
future generations of scientists. John J. Abel published fewer
than 100 papers in his career and only published with 27 different
individuals. Yet, those people
published with more that 330 individuals and those 330 published
with over 4000 individuals." So as you can
see it doesn't take long for your scientific legacy to spread far
and wide.
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