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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
April
U. of I. researcher named
Fellow of American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Jim Barlow,
Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
4/24/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| University
of Illinois Photo |
| William
T. Greenough has been named a Fellow of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences. He studies the neural
biology of the aging process, in particular how experience
organizes the brain in adulthood.
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— William T. Greenough, a researcher at the Beckman
Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, today was named a Fellow of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Greenough, 61, is among 195 scholars, scientists, artists, civic, corporate
and philanthropic leaders from 24 states and 13 nations elected this
year. The new Fellows include two former U.S. presidents; the Chief
Justice of the United States; a Nobel laureate; winners of the Pulitzer
Prize in poetry, drama, music, investigative reporting, and non-fiction;
a former U.S. poet laureate; and a member of the French senate.
Greenough , who joined the Illinois faculty in 1968, was cited for his
research that provided “the first clear evidence for the structural
basis of memory.” He studies the neural biology of the aging process,
in particular how experience organizes the brain in adulthood. He has
long promoted the idea that the key element in behavioral plasticity
is the “sculpting” (formation or retraction) of synaptic
connections between neurons in the brain as a result of physical and
mental activity.
His more recent research has led to significant advances in understanding
the mechanisms involved in Fragile X Syndrome, the most common genetically
inherited form of mental impairment. His findings have led to collaborative
research efforts among scientists around the world to understand the
disease and improve the lives of affected children.
His research has crossed across the disciplines and he holds multiple
faculty appointments. He is a Swanlund Endowed Chair, director of the
university’s Center for Advanced
Study and a professor in the departments of psychology,
cell and developmental biology,
and psychiatry (College of Medicine).
U. of I. Chancellor Richard Herman praised the academy’s selection
of Greenough.
“When the Urbana campus first conceived of an interdisciplinary
research center, Bill Greenough was one of the strongest forces in shaping
it and making it a reality,” Herman said. “Along with Karl
Hess, he transcended traditional competition between physical and life
sciences to establish the Beckman Institute as a world leader in interdisciplinary
research.” Hess is a Swanlund Endowed Chair in electrical and
computer engineering.
Former Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton, Supreme Court Chief
Justice John Roberts, Nobel Prize-winning biochemist and Rockefeller
University President Sir Paul Nurse, and actor and director Martin Scorsese
are among the new Fellows.
“I am honored to have been selected for membership in this truly
august group of individuals in a broad array of societal roles,”
Greenough said, “and I am pleased that it draws attention to all
scientists working to solve the mysteries of Fragile X Syndrome, the
largest cause of inherited mental retardation.”
Fellows and Foreign Honorary Members are nominated and elected to the
Academy by current members. This year’s members – the 226th
class of elected members – will be honored during the annual Induction
Ceremony on Oct. 7 at the academy’s headquarters in Cambridge,
Mass. The academy was founded in 1780.
Greenough is the 35th U. of I. faculty member to be elected by the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences.
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