Ferrier Lecture
The Ferrier Lecture is a Royal Society lectureship given every three years "on a subject related to the advancement of natural knowledge on the structure and function of the nervous system".[1] It was created in 1928 to honour the memory of Sir David Ferrier, a neurologist who was the first British scientist to electronically stimulate the brain for the purpose of scientific study.[1]
In its 81-year history, the Lecture has been given 27 times. It has never been given more than once by the same person, and all lecturers have been male. The first lecture was given in 1929 by Charles Scott Sherrington, and was titled "Some functional problems attaching to convergence".[2] The most recent lecturer was Marc Tessier-Lavigne, who presented a lecture in 2007 titled "Brain development and brain repair: Molecules and mechanisms that control neuronal wiring".[3] In 1971, the lecture was given by two individuals (David Hunter Hubel and Torsten Nils Wiesel) on the same topic, with the title "The function and architecture of the visual cortex".[2]
List of Lecturers
Year | Name | Lecture title | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1929 | Charles Scott Sherrington | "Some functional problems attaching to convergence" | [4] |
1932 | C. U. Ariëns Kappers | "Some correlations between skull and brain" | [5] |
1935 | Otto Loewi | "Problems connected with the principle of humeral transmission of nervous impulses" | – |
1938 | Edgar Douglas Adrian | "Some problems of localization in the central nervous system" | [6] |
1941 | Frederic Charles Bartlett | "Fatigue following highly skilled work" | [7] |
1944 | Gordon Morgan Holmes | "The organization of the visual cortex in man" | [8] |
1947 | Wilder Penfield | "Some observations of the cerebral cortex of Man" | [9] |
1950 | John Zachary Young | "Growth and plasticity in the nervous system" | – |
1953 | Francis Martin Rouse Walshe | "The contribution of clinical observation to cerebral physiology" | [10] |
1956 | Wilfrid Edward Le Gros Clark | "Inquiries into the anatomical basis of olfactory discrimination" | [11] |
1959 | John Carew Eccles | "The nature of central inhibitory action" | [12] |
1962 | William Albert Hugh Rushton | "Visual adaptation" | [13] |
1965 | Stephen William Kuffler | "Physiological properties of vertebrate and invertebrate neurological cells and the movement of substances through the nervous system" | [14] |
1968 | Charles Garrett Phillips | "Studies of a primates brain and hand" | [15] |
1971 | David Hunter Hubel and Torsten Nils Wiesel | "The function and architecture of the visual cortex" | [16] |
1974 | Wilhelm Siegmund Feldberg | "Body temperature and fever, changes in our views during the last decade" | [17] |
1977 | Janos Szentagothai | "The neuron network of the cerebral cortex, a functional interpretation" | [18] |
1980 | Horace Basil Barlow | "Cerebral cortex and the design of the eye" | – |
1983 | Leslie Lars Iversen | "Amino acids and peptides: fast and slow chemical signals in the nervous system" | – |
1986 | Giles Brindley | "The actions of parasympathetic and sympathetic nerves in human micturition, erection and seminal emission, and their restoration in paraplegic patients by implanted electrical stimulators" | – |
1989 | Lawrence Weiskrantz | "Side glances at blindsight, recent approaches to implicit discrimination in human cortical blindness" | [19] |
1992 | Gerald Westheimer | "Seeing depth with two eyes, stereopsis" | [20] |
1995 | Semir Zeki | "Behind the scene: an exploration of the visual brain" | [21] |
1998 | Jean-Pierre Changeux | "The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor and synaptic plasticity" | [22] |
2001 | Andrew Lumsden | "Patterning the embryonic brain" | – |
2004 | Alan Cowey | "Magnetic brain stimulation: what can it tell us about brain function?" | [23] |
2007 | Marc Tessier-Lavigne | "Brain development and brain repair: Molecules and mechanisms that control neuronal wiring" | – |
2010 | Colin Blakemore | "Plasticity of the brain: the key to human development, cognition and evolution" | [24] |
2013 | John O'Keefe | "cognitive neuroscience, especially on the role of the hippocampus, and the mechanisms supporting memory and cognition" | [25] |
References
- General
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- Specific
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