Karl Spencer Lashley Award

The Karl Spencer Lashley Award was established in 1957 by a gift from Dr. Lashley, a member of the Society and a distinguished neuroscientist and neuropsychologist. The award is to be made in recognition of work on the integrative neuroscience of behavior. At the time of his death, he was Emeritus Research Professor of Neuropsychology at Harvard University and Emeritus Director of the Yerkes Laboratories of Primate Biology in Florida. Lashley's contemporaries considered his experimental work as daring and original. His entire scientific life was spent in the study of behavior and its neural basis, or as he phrased it: "the discovery of principles of nervous integration which are as yet completely unknown". His famous experiments on the brain mechanisms of learning, memory and intelligence helped inaugurate the modern era of integrative neuroscience.

Recipients

1981

Eric R. Kandel


1980

Curt P. Richter


1979

Brenda Milner


1978

Victor Percy Whittaker


1977

Torsten Nils Wiesel and David Hunter Hubel


1976

Roger Wolcott Sperry


1975

Paul Weiss


1974

Vernon Benjamin Mountcastle


1973

Janos Szentagothai


1972

Paul D. MacLean


1971

Sir Wilfrid Le Gros Clark


1970

Horace Winchell Magoun


1969

Elizabeth C. Crosby


1968

Theodore H. Bullock


1967

George H. Bishop