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2 How he Environment Helps to Build the Brain
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Published:November 1997
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Abstract
Professor Colin Blakemore, PhD, ScD, FRS, studied medicine at the University of Cambridge and completed his PhD in Physiological Optics at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1968. After teaching at Cambridge for eleven years, he was appointed Waynflete Professor of Physiology at the University of Oxford in 1979 and has held the post ever since. Professor Blakemore is also Director of both the Medical Research Council and the McDonnell-Pew Centres for Cognitive Neuroscience in Oxford and is President of the British Association for the Advancement of Science for 1997-98. During 1995-96 he was Regents’ Visiting Professor at the University of California, Davis. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1992 and has been the recipient of numerous prizes and medals from medical and scientific institutions throughout the world. Professor Blakemore is a frequent broadcaster on radio (he delivered the BBC’s Reith Lectures in 1976) and television; he presented a 13-part television series on the mind and brain, The Mind Machine, in 1988. In addition to his many academic publications, he has written several books on the brain for the general public, including Mechanics of the Mind, for which he was awarded the Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science, and The Mind Machine. He is one of Britain’s most influential communicators of science.
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