• Source: Michael Dickinson (biologist)
    • Michael H. Dickinson (born 1963) is an American fly bioengineer and neuroscientist, and Zarem Professor of Biology and Bioengineering at the California Institute of Technology. He studies Drosophila flight control systems and sensory processing and was dubbed the Fly Guy by The Scientist.


      Early life and education


      Dickinson was born in Seaford, Delaware, in 1963 but grew up in Baltimore before moving to Philadelphia. He graduated from Brown University with a B.S. in 1984, and from University of Washington with a Ph.D. in 1989. He did his postdoctoral work with Karl Georg Götz at the University of Tübingen.


      Career and Research


      He was an assistant professor at the University of Chicago in 1991, before moving to the University of California, Berkeley, in 1996. He was at California Institute of Technology from 2002 to 2011 before moving to the University of Washington for 2010 to 2014. He is now back at Caltech.
      He is a Monitoring Editor at the Journal of Experimental Biology. He was a course director of the Neural Systems and Behavior course at the Marine Biological Laboratory.


      Awards


      1990 Larry Sandler Memorial Award
      2001 MacArthur Fellows Program
      2008 American Academy of Arts and Sciences


      Sources


      "Micro Warfare", Popular Mechanics, Feb 2001
      "Flyorama", Popular Science, Dec 2002


      References




      External links


      "Focusing on Fruit Flies, Curiosity Takes Flight", New York Times
      "Flies In Danger Escape With Safety Dance", NPR, Joe Palca
      "Fly Flight Simulators", ScienCentral
      "Michael H. Dickson", Scientific Commons
      "How a fly flies" (TED conference)

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: