Abstract

Even an especially forward-facing field such as radiology, locus of some of the most significant innovations in medicine over the past century, needs to pause from time to time to reflect on its past. A key opportunity for such reflection is provided by the stories of the remarkable men and women who have trained in the field and made major contributions to science. One such individual, largely unknown to radiologists today, is Salvador Luria, whose discoveries in bacterial and viral genetics garnered him the 1969 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

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