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The article "Sur quelques points d'algèbre homologique" by Alexander Grothendieck, [1] now often referred to as the Tôhoku paper, [2] was published in 1957 in the Tôhoku Mathematical Journal. It revolutionized the subject of homological algebra, a purely algebraic aspect of algebraic topology. [3]
Due to World War II the publication of the journal stopped in 1943 with volume 49. Publication was resumed in 1949 with the volume numbering starting again at 1. In order to distinguish between the identical numbered volumes, volumes in the first publishing period are referred to as the first series whereas the later volumes are called second series.
Library Genesis (shortened to LibGen) is a shadow library project for file-sharing access to scholarly journal articles, academic and general-interest books, images, comics, audiobooks, and magazines. The site enables free access to content that is otherwise paywalled or not digitized elsewhere. [1]
The Tohoku Pharmaceutical University (東北薬科大学, Tōhoku yakka daigaku) was established in 1949, based on the Tohoku Pharmaceutical College, which was established in 1939. In 1959, it became the first cancer research institute established at a private pharmaceutical university in Japan.
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Kümmerle, Harald (2018). "Hayashi Tsuruichi and the success of the Tôhoku Mathematical Journal as a publication". In Ogawa, T.; Morimoto, M. (eds.). Mathematics of Takebe Katahiro and History of Mathematics in East Asia. Advanced Studies in Pure Mathematics. Vol. 79. Tokyo: Mathematical Society of Japan. pp. 347–358.
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In 2001, Ryuta Kawashima conducted a study at Tohoku University in Japan, claiming that frontal lobes are not stimulated during video game playing sessions. However scientists widely dismissed his study after he claimed that the lack of stimulation could potentially stunt brain development and negatively affect people's ability to control their ...