Skip to main content Skip to secondary navigation

Videos

Main content start

Inventing the Cell Sorter

The Fluorescent Activated Cell Sorter.  Original program 4/161992.  Hosted by Brian Williams

Watch video

Frontiers in Immunology

Frontiers in Immunology 1995 Symposium, Session 3 (Feb 10, 1995)
Mario Roederer @0:02:30,
Garry Nolan @0:35:50,
Laurice Garret @1:13:00

Watch Video

Interchange - Leonore Herzenberg

InterChange - Leonore Herzenberg
(August 1997)

Watch Video

History of FACS @ Stanford University 1959-1999 Presented by Len Herzenberg 1999

This is Leonard Herenberg's FACS History presented at the 40th Anniversary of the Herzenberg Laboratory.  September 1999.

Watch Video

The Novartis Prize for Basic Immunology 2004

The Novartis Prize for Basic Immunology

The 2004 Novartis Prize for Basic Immunology went to Ralph Steinman who in the 1970's identified dendritic cells and determined their role in antigen presentation.

Ralph Steinman - Rockfeller University, USA
The Novartis Prize for Clinical Immunology

The 2004 Novartis Prize for Clinical Immunology went to Hugh McDevitt who in the late 1960’s identified the "immune response genes" and mapped them to the Major Histocompatibility Complex, which caused a major paradigm shift in immunology.

Hugh McDevitt - Stanford University, USA
Special Novartis Prize for Immunology

Proceedings of the 12th International Congress of Immunology and the 4th Annual Conference of the Federation of Clinical Immunology Societies. July 18-23, 2004. Montreal, Canada

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16082737


As an exception in 2004 the jury awarded a Special Novartis Prize for Immunology to Leonard Herzenberg for his pioneering work in Fluorescent Activated Cell Sorting (FACS) and the introduction of fluorescent-labelled antibodies as reliable FACS reagents.

Leonard Herzenberg - Stanford University, USA

 

Watch Video

Tom Nozaki - 40 Years of Service

Tom Nozaki has been an engineer in the Herzenberg Lab for over 40 years..  This is a short video produced by Stanford University in recognition of Tom Nozaki's 40 years with Stanford University.

Watch Video