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Colin Blakemore studied medical sciences at the University
of Cambridge and completed his PhD at the University of California,
Berkeley, in 1968. He taught at the University of Cambridge
for eleven years and in 1979 took up the Chair of Physiology
at the University of Oxford. He is also Director of the Oxford
Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience, and was President of the
British Association for the Advancement of Science for 1997–98.
He has worked as a Visiting Professor at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, New York University, the University
of California and the Salk Institute, and also in Japan, Switzerland,
Italy, France, the Czech Republic and China. He holds the
degree of DSc from the universities of Cambridge and Oxford,
honorary doctorates from Aston and Salford Universities and
an honorary fellowship from Cardiff University. He is a Fellow
of the Royal Society, the Academy of Medical Sciences and
the Institute of Biology, a member of the Academia Europaea
and a Foreign Member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts
and Sciences. His research has been concerned with many aspects
of vision and the early development of the brain. His awards
include the 1996 international Alcon Prize for vision research
and the 1989 Royal Society Michael Faraday Award for the furtherance
of the public understanding of science. He is a former member
of the NRPB Advisory Group on Non-Ionising Radiation. Colin
retired from the PMC in 2003, following his appointment as
Chief Executive of the Medical Research Council.
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