Dein Suchergebnis zum Thema: Philadelphia

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft führt Gesamtrevision ihrer Präparate-Sammlungen durch

https://www.mpg.de/10375426/max-planck-gesellschaft-fuehrt-gesamtrevision-ihrer-praeparate-sammlungen-durch

Die Untersuchungen zu den im Frühjahr 2015 wiederentdeckten menschlichen Hirnschnitten aus dem Nachlass des Arztes und Hirnforschers Julius Hallervorden im Archiv in Berlin haben den Präsidenten der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft jetzt veranlasst, eine Gesamtrevision an allen Max-Planck-Instituten zu verfügen, die Sammlungen von Humanpräparaten besitzen. Erste Stichproben am Max-Planck-Institut für Psychiatrie in München hatten ergeben, dass sich in der Sammlung des Instituts noch Hirnschnitte befinden, die eigentlich 1990 auf dem Waldfriedhof hätten beigesetzt werden sollen.
Carsten Reinhardt (President of the Chemical Heritage Foundation, Philadelphia/Universität

Max Planck Society to carry out complete review of its specimens collection

https://www.mpg.de/10378571/specimens-collection-review

The investigations into the brain sections belonging to the estate of the doctor and brain researcher Julius Hallervorden, rediscovered in the spring of 2015, have prompted the President of the Max Planck Society to launch a total review of all those Max Planck Institutes that still own collections of human specimens. Initial investigations at the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry had shown that the Institute still possesses brain sections which actually should have been interred in Munich’s Waldfriedhof in 1990. The Max Planck Society will also appoint a project with a view to establishing the identities of the victims based on the available files and records. The human specimens discovered as part of the total review should, wherever possible, subsequently buried with names.
of Science), Carsten Reinhardt (President of the Chemical Heritage Foundation, Philadelphia

Older parents are happier with more children

https://www.mpg.de/1196914/older-parents-happier

The more children young parents have, the unhappier they are. From age 40 on, however, it is the other way round. Then, more children generally mean more happiness. This is true independent of sex, income, or partnership status, as researchers of the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research (MPIDR) in Rostock and the University of Pennsylvania now show in a study based on a survey of over 200,000 women and men in 86 countries conducted from 1981 to 2005.
Together with Rachel Margolis from the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia