Ariëns Kappers Medal
The Ariëns Kappers Medal is a scientific honor named after the Dutch neurologist Cornelius Ubbo Ariëns Kappers, the first director of the Netherlands Central Institute for Brain Research (Nederlands Instituut voor Hersenonderzoek), now the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, from 1909-1946. The medal is awarded by the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences on recommendation of the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience to people who have made an outstanding contribution to neuroscience.
Recipients of the Ariëns Kappers Medal
- Pasko Rakic (1987)
- Anders Björklund (1988)
- Mortimer Mishkin (1989)
- Robert Y. Moore (1991)
- Dale Purves (1993)
- Joseph S. Takahashi (1995)
- Patricia S. Goldman-Rakic (1996)
- Dean H. Hamer (1999)
- Gerald M. Edelman (1999)
- Vilayanur Ramachandran (1999)
- Steven Rose (1999)
- Michael Gazzaniga (1999)
- Antonio Damasio (1999)
- Rudolf Nieuwenhuys (2000)
- Mark H. Tuszynski (2001)
- Dennis D.M. O’Leary (2003)
- Clifford B. Saper (2005)
- James W. Fawcett (2008)
- Frans B.M. De Waal (2009)
- Marcus Raichle (2010)
- Györgi Buzsáki (2014)
- Rui M. Costa (2017)
- Roberto Malinow (2019)
gollark: > <@!258639553357676545> well, its not entirely possible to do anything bad with a neural network other than destroy it.I mean, with brains, it would be bad if you got a virus and it started encrypting your memories or something. Or if your religious beliefs were overwritten after you downloaded an evil virus from the interweb.
gollark: And you want to because addictive.
gollark: No, smoking just really quite harmful if you do much of it.
gollark: Oh, you definitely would be, because drugs bad and make you (mostly temporarily) stupiderer.
gollark: Computer stuff just tends to have hilariously stupid amounts of security vulnerabilities in everything, and brains at least... probably less so, since most of them would require physical access probably maybe hopefully.
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