5) To what extent do events occurring during regeneration re- semble
those seen in development? Questions like these remain open,
particularly in relation to the mammalian central nervous system and to
the effects of lesions or disease. The first chapters of this volume are
concerned primarily with normal and abnormal development of the nervous
system. New concepts have emerged over the past few years as a result of
experiments made on the development of the higher nervous system in
mammals. Thus, the principles of cell death, competition, selective
retraction of specific processes, and the effects of abnormalities on
the development of the rest of the system have now been extensively
investigated. In addition, considerable information is available about
biochemical changes during normal and abnormal development in the human.
At the other end of the scale, in invertebrates it is now possible to
follow cell lineage and to define the origin and fate of a sin- gle
neuron of known function together with its processes. While an
understanding of development is clearly important for studying basic
mechanisms of repair and regeneration, one cannot expect the processes
to be identical or even comparable in the two situations. For example,
cell migration, guidance by radial glial fibers, selective cell death,
and the critical periods for competition, sprouting, and retraction
observed in the visual system can hardly playa part in repair.