Record

RefNoAV/8/18
LevelItem
TitleProfessor Richard Frackowiak interviewed by Richard Thomas
Date2006-2007
DescriptionInterviewed as part of the 'Todays's Neuroscience, Tomorrow's History' Video Archive Project

NEUROIMAGING

The development of non-invasive methods that allow the visualization of the structure and the function of the living intact brain is one of the major achievements of the latter part of the twentieth century. British scientists played key roles in the discovery and development of the various forms of “imaging” that are now available and that have been widely adopted in many branches of medicine.

Richard Frackowiak founded the influential Wellcome Department of Imaging Neurosciences’ Functional Imaging Laboratory at the Institute of Neurology in 1994. A clinician by training he has investigated the physiology of normal and diseased human brains with positron emission tomography (PET) and subsequently magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and he established the quantitative steady-state method for measuring human cerebral blood flow and oxygen extraction. He has investigated the pathophysiology of dementia; the evolution of acute cerebral ischemia; demonstrated that foetal cell implants for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease become functional, and has pioneered investigation of plastic mechanisms that underpin recovery after brain injury. (Frackowiak R S J, Jones T. (2003) Imaging Neuroscience: Clinical frontiers for diagnosis and management, British Medical Bulletin Series 65, Oxford University Press.) He has shown that scanning pre-symptomatically may provide a reliable bio-marker of neurodegeneration associated with ageing.

Supported by a Wellcome Trust Public Engagement Grant in the History of Medicine to Professor Tilli Tansey (University College London) and Professor Leslie Iverson (Oxford), this project recorded interviews with 12 prominent neuroscientists, between 2006 and 2007.

Neuroscience has been one of the key areas of biomedical science that the Wellcome Trust has fostered since its creation in 1936. Indeed, the very first ' fellowship ' grant awarded by the Wellcome Trust in 1937 was to Otto Loewi, who shared the 1936 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Sir Henry Dale for their work on the elucidation of chemical neurotransmission.

This project aimed to provide material resources about contemporary neuroscience to inform and stimulate present and new generations of neuroscientists, and for others, such as historians, journalists and policy-makers, engaged in the analysis, understanding and promotion of modern medical sciences.

Each interview is available as text, freely downloadable as a pdf, and also as an audio podcast and as a video via YouTube. Details and links are given on each individual page. The unedited transcripts, all the original film rushes and other correspondence have been deposited in the Wellcome Library. Scientific publicaitons of each interviewee can be retrieved by interrogating the free PubMedCentral database at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov./pmc

Project team;
Tilli and Les Iversen: grant holders and editors
Richard Thomas: producer, interviewer and editor
Michael Sanders: camera and sound
Carole Reeves: podcast and video clips editor
Alan Yabsley: web-site designer
Debra Gee: transcriber

Produced by Glowstars TV Ltd., 5 Albion Terrace, London E8 4ER

SELECTION OF THEMES AND SUBJECTS

Constraints of finance and time have meant that it has been possible to interview only 12 neuroscientists, and difficult decisions had to be made about areas and individuals to include. Mindful of the Society for Neurosciences’ oral–history project, (see http://www.sfn.org/index.aspx?pagename=HistoryofNeuroscience_videos) we sought to avoid duplication with their subjects. After much discussion and consultation, we focussed on three major thematic groupings: neuropharmacology, psychiatry/neuropsychology, and neuroimaging, with four interviewees in each. This will inevitably exclude some major contributions to modern neuroscience, but we believe that the internal coherence achieved will enhance the material’s historical, educational and out-reach potential.

The interviewees, by the very nature of our purpose, are part of the distinguished elite of international science who have made outstanding contributions to neuroscience, and increased our understanding and awareness of ways in which the nervous system functions in health and disease. These are individual interviews in which the subjects were asked to reflect on their careers and the influences that have affected the problems they have tackled and the directions they have taken. Although inevitably centred on one person, the interviews are far-ranging and include discussions of, inter alia, where relevant, collaborators, technical support staff, clinical relevance, commercial relationships and funding mechanisms. Those interested in hearing many voices in broader discussions of modern medical sciences are directed, in the first instance, towards the Witness Seminar series at; http://www.ucl.ac.uk/histmed/publications/wellcome_witnesses_c20th_med
AccessStatusOpen
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