Allan Snyder
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This biographical article or section is written like a résumé. Please help improve it by revising it to be neutral and encyclopedic. (December 2007) |
| This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (June 2007) |
| Allan W. Snyder | |
| Born | Philadelphia |
|---|---|
| Residence | Sydney, Australia |
| Fields | Mind Sciences, Visual Neurobiology, Communications and Optical Physics |
| Institutions | Director, Centre for the Mind, University of Sydney |
| Alma mater | University of London (DSc), University College London (PhD), Harvard (MS), Massachusetts Institute of Technology (SM), Pennsylvania State University (BS), Central High School Philadelphia (BA). |
| Notable awards | 1996 Harrie Massey Medal of the British Institutes of Physics, 1997 International Australia Prize, 2001 Marconi Prize, 2001 Clifford Paterson Prize, Royal Society |
Allan Snyder is the director of the Centre for the Mind and a co-founder of Emotiv Systems. He holds the 150th Anniversary Chair of Science and the Mind at the University of Sydney, Australia.
Prof. Snyder's research career began in optical physics and he has published several important papers and books in this field.[1] More recently, he has begun to work on mind sciences.
Prof. Snyder has appeared in several television programs promoting his idea that transcranial magnetic stimulation of the left temporal lobe can induce savant-like skills in typical people. For example, these studies claim that after TMS, a person can draw better or count the number of dots on a screen very fast. Despite widespread press coverage, many of these studies have yet to be published in mainstream scientific journals.
Contents |
[edit] Awards
In December 2001 he received the Marconi Prize in New York City.
He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of London and the recipient of its 2001 Clifford Paterson Prize.
Previously, he was a Guggenheim Fellow at Yale University’s School of Medicine and a Royal Society Research Fellow at the Physiology Laboratories of Cambridge University. He is a graduate of Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and University College London.
[edit] Education
Snyder has a DSc from the University of London, a PhD from University College, London, an MS from Harvard University and an SM from Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

