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Autorenporträt
Dale Purves is Geller Professor of Neurobiology Emeritus in the Duke Institute for Brain Sciences where he remains Research Professor with additional appointments in the department of Psychology and Brain Sciences, and the department of Philosophy at Duke University. He earned a B.A. from Yale University in 1960 and an M.D. from Harvard Medical School in 1964. After further clinical training as a surgical resident at the Massachusetts General Hospital, service as a Peace Corps physician, and postdoctoral training at Harvard and University College London, he was appointed to the faculty at Washington University School of Medicine in 1973. He moved to Duke in 1990 as the founding chair of the Department of Neurobiology at Duke Medical Center, was subsequently Director of Duke's Center for Cognitive Neuroscience (2003-2009), and also served as the Director of the Neuroscience and Behavioral Disorders Program at the Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School in Singapore (2009-2013). Purves was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1989 for his work on neural development and synaptic plasticity. His research over the last 20 years has focused on the visual perception of lightness, color, form and motion, and the auditory perception of music and speech. In addition to membership in the National Academy of Sciences, Purves is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Medicine. His books include Principles of Neural Development (with Jeff Lichtman; Sinaur,1985); Body and Brain (Harvard,1988); Neural Activity and the Growth of the Brain (Cambridge, 1992); Why We See What We Do (with Beau Lotto; Sinauer, 2003); Perceiving Geometry (with Catherine Howe; Springer 2005); Why We See What We Do Redux (Sinauer, 2011) and Brains: How they Seem to Work (Financial Times Press, 2011). He is also lead author on the textbooks Neuroscience, (6th edition, Sinauer/Oxford, 2018), and Principles of Cognitive Neuroscience (2nd edition, Sinauer, 2012). More recently Music as Biology was published by Harvard University Press in 2017 and Brains as Engines of Association by Oxford University Press in 2019.
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