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Lawrence Weiskrantz

Lawrence Weiskrantz FRS (28 March 1926 – 27 January 2018) was a British neuropsychologist. Weiskrantz is credited with discovering the phenomenon of blindsight, and with establishing the role of the amygdala in emotional learning and emotional behavior.[1] Blindsight is when a person with a brain injury causing blindness can nevertheless detect, point accurately at, and discriminate visually presented objects.[2]

Early life

Weiskrantz originally attended Girard College, a boarding school in Philadelphia, due in part to the death of his father when he was six.[3] After graduating, he attended Swarthmore College and served in World War II.[3] Shortly before his graduation, he was awarded a Catherwood fellowship at Oxford University.[3]

Career

Weiskrantz became Professor of Psychology at Oxford University where he remained a full professor until retirement in 1993.[3] He then became an emeritus professor of the university and an emeritus fellow of Magdalen College.[3] Weiskrantz had a lifelong interest in the writings and research of the Russian neuropsychologist Alexander Luria, whom he had met and befriended while Luria was still doing research.[4] The two remained colleagues until Luria's death in 1977.[4] In the 1950s Weiskrantz went on to ellucidate the region of the temporal lobe responsible for the erratic emotional behaviors in Klüver-Bucy syndrome, a phenomenon known since the 1930 which came to inspire the limbic brain hypothesis of emotion.[1] Although this hypothesis did not live to its claims, Weiskrantz used instrumental fear conditioning in lesioned animals to identify the temporal structure responsible for Klüver-Bucy syndrome.[1] Ever since, the amygdala has remained crucial in the scientific understanding of emotion.[1] Weiskrantz is generally credited with having discovered the phenomenon of blindsight following his book on this subject in 1986, which is the voluntary visually evoked response to a stimulus presented within a scotoma.[4]

Academic and service positions he held included:

Weiskrantz supervised at least 10 PhDs, including Alan Cowey, Charles Gross, Nicholas Humphrey, Susan Iversen, and Melvyn A. Goodale.

Honours

Weiskrantz was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1980.[5][6] He was on its council in 1988–1989.[3] He was a member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, and of Academia Europaea.[3] Weiskrantz served on the Council of the Fyssen Foundation.[3]

Weiskrantz was a medalist of the Royal Society of Medicine and a medalist of the American Association for Advancement of Science.[3] He delivered the Heisenberg Lecture of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences/Siemens Foundation and the Ferrier Lecture of the Royal Society.[3] In 1997 he was awarded with an honorary doctorate at Tilburg University, the Netherlands.

Selected publications

References

  1. ^ a b c d Kandel ER, Schwartz JH, Jessell TM, Siegelbaum SA, Hudspeth AJ (2012). Principles of Neural Science. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 1084. ISBN 978-0-07-139011-8.
  2. ^ Weiskrantz, Lawrence (1986). Blindsight: A Case Study and Implications. Oxford University Press.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Professor Lawrence Weiskrantz". Magdalen College - University of Oxford. Archived from the original on 13 January 2018. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  4. ^ a b c Weiskrantz, Lawrence (1999). Consciousness lost and found: A neuropsychological exploration (Repr. ed.). Oxford, Angleterre: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198524588.
  5. ^ "Lawrence Weiskrantz". royalsociety.org. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
  6. ^ Goodale, Melvyn Alan (2020). "Lawrence Weiskrantz. 28 March 1926—27 January 2018". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 69: 539–559. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2019.0045. S2CID 219181284.

External links