Record

Authorised form of namePettigrew; John Douglas (1943 - 2019)
Other forms of nameJack
Dates1943 - 2019
NationalityAustralian
Place of birthWagga Wagga, New South Wales, Australia
Date of birth02/10/1943
Place of deathKempton, Tasmania, Australia
Date of death07/05/2019
OccupationNeuroscientist
Research fieldPhysiology
Neuroscience
Ecology
Ethology
Evolution
Phylogenetics
ActivityEducation:
Katoomba High School; University of Sydney, BSc (1966); MSc (1968); MB (1969)
Career:
Resident Medical Officer, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, New South Wales (1969); Miller Fellow (1970-1972); Research Associate (1972-1973), University of California, Berkeley; Associate Professor, California Institute of Technology (1974-1977); Associate Professor of Biology, Caltech, Pasadena (1978-1981); Director, National Vision Research Institute, Victoria (1979-1983); Professor of Physiology, University of Queensland (1983-2007); Director, Vision, Touch & Hearing Research Centre (1988-2007)
Memberships:
FAA (1987)
Membership categoryFellow
Date of election19/03/1987
Age at election43
RelationshipsSon of J J Pettigrew; married (1968), dissolved (1996); one son, two daughters
OtherInfoJohn (‘Jack’) Pettigrew was outstanding for the number of new directions of research he initiated in the comparative and developmental physiology of the senses in vertebrates. He was the first to demonstrate that neurons in the striate cortex are selective for binocular disparity. He showed that the binocular visual system of the owl, though very different anatomically, shares many functional and developmental properties with cats and monkeys. He showed that nonvisual (nor-adrenergic) pathways influence the ‘critical period’ for development of binocular neurons in the striate cortex. He demonstrated that owls have an auditory map of sound source location in their midbrains. He was quick to appreciate the ecological and evolutionary significance of these discoveries, each of which has opened up a fertile new area of investigation, and he continued to elucidate new problems in the visual, auditory and somatosensory systems of a wide range of vertebrates.

Professor Jack Pettigrew FRS died on 7 May 2019.
SourceSources:
WWA1998
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Pettigrew
Virtual International Authority Filehttp://viaf.org/viaf/93290921
CodeNA4656
Archives associated with this Fellow
RefNoTitleDate
EC/1987/29Pettigrew, John Douglas: certificate of election to the Royal Society1986
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