Professor Peter Bishop interviewed by Dr Max Blythe
TitelProfessor Peter Bishop interviewed by Dr Max Blythe
Referens240000016
Datum1996
UpphovsmanAustralian Academy of Science
Omfattning och innehållProfessor Peter Bishop was born in 1917 in Tamworth, New South Wales. He received a BMBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) from the University of Sydney in 1940. He served in the Navy during World War II then went to England where he began his work in neurophysiology. In 1950 he returned to the University of Sydney where he continued his work on the electrical stimulation of the optic nerve. He became Professor of Physiology in 1955. In the 1960s Bishop began studies into how an eye forms an image, and he and his colleagues developed a mathematical model of the visual system of a cat. He became interested in the ability of people to see in three dimensions, and found that nerve impulses from the two eyes go back to the same cell in the brain. Bishop was Professor and Head of the Department of Physiology in the John Curtin School of Medical Research at the Australian National University between 1967 and 1982. Peter Bishop passed away in June 2012.
SpråkEnglish
Digital referens
Nyckelord för personer Peter Orlebar *Bishop, Max Blythe
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