About the Histochemical Society

 

The Histochemical Society was founded in 1950 and is a non-profit organization of scientists sharing a passion for the development and use of visual techniques that provide biochemical and molecular information about the structure and function of cells, tissues and organs and for the dissemination of this knowledge through education and outreach. 

The Society owns and operates the Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry (http://www.jhc.org) (The Journal) which publishes significant advances in visual techniques that provide biochemical and molecular information about the structure and function of cells, tissues, and organs. In addition to novel primary data papers, timely review articles on all aspects of cell biology are encouraged.  The Journal emphasizes publication of papers related to microscopic analyses of cells and tissues but encourages submissions in which histochemical and cytochemical techniques are complemented by modern genetic, molecular and biochemical approaches.

We encourage you to visit the HCS webpage (www.histochemicalsociety.org) for information about regular and associate membership. Members receive on-line access to the Journal, discounted registration at the annual meeting and other benefits.  Research students receive substantial discounts for annual dues and are eligible for travel and other awards related to the HCS annual meeting.

Eduardo Rosa-Molinar
Kevin Roth

Eduardo Rosa-Molinar, Ph.D. is President of HCS and Associate Professor of Biology at the University of Puerto Rico – Rio Piedras. His research interests are related to human and comparative neuroembryology; comparative and evolutionary neuroanatomy; neuroanatomical tract tracing; correlative light, and fluorescence microscopy; electron microscopy and tomography.

Kevin Roth, MD, Ph.D. is Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry and Professor and Chair of the Department of Pathology at the University of Alabama, Birmingham. He is Director of the UAB Comprehensive Neuroscience Center and the Alabama Neuroscience Blueprint Core Center, an NIH funded interdisciplinary core facility that provides technical support for NIH funded neuroscientists throughout the Southeast US. Dr. Roth’s research focuses on the molecular regulation of neuronal cell death and he has a particular interest in neural stem cell biology.

William Stahl

William Stahl, Ph.D. is Executive Director of HCS and Professor Emeritus of Neurology and Physiology and Biophysics at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle.  He is a Past-President of the Society and is responsible for management of activities in the Business Office of the Society and the Journal and co-organizes HCS courses at the annual meeting of the Society. He has over 100 publications on mechanisms and modulation of ion transport systems in the nervous system and on the role of oncogenic epidermal growth factor receptors in modulation of microtubule function in cancer cells.