| « back to April calendar | Walter J. Freeman, M.D. | | | | | | | Walter J. Freeman is a fourth generation doctor in his family. He studied physics and mathematics at M.I.T., electronics in the Navy in World War II, philosophy at the University of Chicago, medicine at Yale University, internal medicine at Johns Hopkins, and neuropsychiatry at UCLA. He has taught brain science in the University of California at Berkeley since 1959, where he is Professor of the Graduate School. He received his M.D. cum laude in 1954, the Bennett Award from the Society of Biological Psychiatry in 1964, a Guggenheim in 1965, the MERIT Award from NIMH in 1990, and the Pioneer Award from the Neural Networks Council of the IEEE in 1992. He was President of the International Neural Network Society in 1994, and is Life Fellow of the IEEE. He has authored over 400 articles and 4 books: "Mass Action in the Nervous System" 1975, "Societies of Brains" 1995, "Neurodynamics" 2000, and "How Brains Make Up Their Minds" 2001. | | | | | | | | | | At the completion of this session, the participant should be able to: | | | 1) Discuss the brief history of psychiatry in the past 150 years, 2) Describe the nonlinear neurodynamics of perception and learning, and 3) Discuss the role and mechanism of unlearning as a possible model for transference. | |
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