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I
was born in Uppsala Sweden in 1924, the youngest of five children. My
father, Fritz S. Wiesel, was chief psychiatrist and head of Beckomberga
Hospital, a mental institution located on the outskirts of Stockholm.
We were brought up by my mother, Anna-Lisa (b. Bentzer), at the hospital
and were sent by bus to Whitlockska Samskolan, a coeducational private
school in the city. I was a rather lazy, mischievous student, interested
mainly in sports. My election as president of the high school's athletic
association was my only memorable achievement during that period. Suddenly,
at the age of 17, I became a serious student and I did reasonably well
as a medical student. My curiosity about the workings of the nervous system
was stimulated by the lectures of Carl Gustaf Bernhard and Rudolf Skoglund,
my professors in neurophysiology. Because of my background I was also
interested in psychiatry, and I spent one year while I was a medical student
working with patients in different mental hospitals.
When my studies were completed I returned to Professor Bernhards's laboratory
at the Karolinska Institute in 1954 to do basic neurophysiological research.
The following year I had the good fortune to be invited to the United
States as a postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Stephen Kuffler's laboratory at
the Wilmer Institute, Johns Hopkins Medical School. Dr. Kuffler had just
published his now classical study of the receptive field arrangements
of cat retinal ganglion cells. This was an important extension of the
pioneering work of Drs. Hartline and Granit, for which they received the
1967 Nobel Prize. David Hubel joined the laboratory in 1968, and the two
of us decided to explore the receptive field properties of cells in the
central visual pathways. This marked the beginning of our twenty year
collaboration.
In 1959 Dr. Kuffler was invited to become a professor of pharmacology
at Harvard Medical School, and he brought a group of young and enthusiastic
investigators with him from Johns Hopkins Medical School. The effectiveness
of this group of neuroscientists in research and teaching, and the foresight
of Dr. Ebert, then the Dean of the Medical School, led to the formation
of the Department of Neurobiology with Stephen Kuffler as the chairman.
In addition to David Hubel and myself, the original group of emigres from
Johns Hopkins included Edwin Furshpan and David Potter; together with
Edward Kravitz we became the original faculty of the new department. David
and I now had the opportunity to continue our work in a stimulating environment.
Our collaboration continued until the late seventies. In the past several
years I worked with Charles Gilbert, a young investigator in the Department.
In 1973 I was asked to be head of the Department of Neurobiology. Dr. Kuffler, who meant so much to all of us, continued his work as a University
Professor until he died suddenly in 1980. My only regret is that he could
not join David and me in the celebration of the Nobel Prize.
I was married to
Teeri Stenhammar 1956-1970 and Ann Yee 1973-1981. My daughter Sara Elisabeth
was born in 1975. Aside from my work my interests lie in the arts and
in world affairs.
Honors & Awards:
1967 A.M. (Hon.),
Harvard University
1971 The Dr. Jules C. Stein Award, presented by the Trustees for Research
to Prevent Blindness
1972 The Lewis S. Rosenstiel Prize, presented by Brandeis University
1972 Ferrier Lecture (Royal Society of London)
1975 The Freidenwald Award, presented by the Trustees of the Association
for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
1976 The Grass Lecture (Society for Neuroscience)
1977 The Karl Spencer Lashley Prize, presented by the American Philosophical
Society
1978 The Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize, presented by Columbia University
1979 The Dickson Prize, presented by the University of Pittsburgh 1980
The Ledlie Prize, Harvard University
1980 Society for Scholars (Johns Hopkins University)
1981 The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine From Les Prix Nobel 1981.
ADDENDUM 10/97
In 1983, I moved
to The Rockefeller University as Vincent and Brook Astor Professor, establishing
a new Laboratory of Neurobiology. At Rockefeller, I continued my close
collaboration with Charles Gilbert on the circuitry of primary visual
cortex, concentrating on the specificity and dynamic nature of the long-range
horizontal connections that Charles and I discovered at Harvard. Charles
is now a professor at Rockefeller who heads his own laboratory. Many others
in the lab, including Lawrence Katz, Daniel T'so, and Amiram Grinvald
- made major contributions to our understanding of the functional architecture
and development of visual cortex, and developed new tools for studying
visual processing in the brain.
In December 1991
I became president of Rockefeller, where I have focussed on recruiting
new faculty, expanding Rockefeller's programs of scientific research,
and finding new resources to support the university's scientific activities.
This has been a challenging, and, perhaps to my surprise, an extremely
enjoyable part of my career.
Since 1994, I have
served as chairman of the National Academy of Science's Committee on Human
Rights. In 1995 I became chairman of the board of the Aaron Diamond AIDS
Research Center.
I married Jean Stein
in 1995. In 1997, my daughter Sarah graduated from the University of Pennsylvania.
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