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{"target":"https://pubannotation.org/docs/sourcedb/PMC/sourceid/2812702","sourcedb":"PMC","sourceid":"2812702","source_url":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/2812702","text":"However, the interwar period had also brought two important supporters of Langley's theory of receptive substances and of receptor theory more generally on the scene. Alfred Joseph Clark (1885–1941), who succeeded Cushny in the chair at UCL in 1920 and again, after Cushny's death in 1926, in the Edinburgh chair of Materia Medica; and John Henry Gaddum (1900–1965), who became professor of pharmacology at UCL in 1935. Both Clark and Gaddum had been students of Langley in Cambridge.","tracks":[]}