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Richard W Tsien

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Nationality
  
American

Fields
  
Neuroscience

Parents
  
Hsue-Chu Tsien


Role
  
Professor

Name
  
Richard Tsien

Notable students
  
Karl Deisseroth

Richard W. Tsien Richard W Tsien DPhil to Be Inaugural Director of New


Born
  
錢永佑 March 3, 1945 (age 79) Tating, Kweichow, Republic of China (
1945-03-03
)

Institutions
  
New York University Medical Center, Stanford University

Alma mater
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Oxford, University College of Oxford

Books
  
Electric Current Flow in Excitable Cells

Education
  
University of Oxford (1970)

Similar People
  
Karl Deisseroth, Gerald Crabtree, Feng Zhang, Kryn Stankunas

Richard Winyu Tsien (born 3 March 1945), is a Chinese-born American neurobiologist and engineer. He is the Druckenmiller Professor of Neuroscience, Chair of the Department of Physiology and Neuroscience, and Director of the NYU Neuroscience Institute at New York University Medical Center, and also an emeritus faculty of Stanford University School of Medicine .

Contents

Richard W. Tsien Richard W Tsien NYU Shanghai

Roger Y. Tsien, winner of nobel prize in chemistry is his brother.

Richard W. Tsien Richard Tsiens Profile Stanford Profiles

Early life

Tsien was born in Tating, Kweichow, China and is a descendant of the King of Wuyue Tsien Liu. Soon after his birth, Tsien's family moved to the United States.

Education

Tsien received BS in 1965 and MS in 1966 both in electrical engineering and both from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Tsien then won a Rhodes Scholarship and went to study in UK at Wadham College, Oxford from 1966 to 1969. Tsien obtained PhD in biophysics from Oxford in 1970.

Career

From 1968 to 1970, Tsien was a Weir Junior Research Fellow at University College, Oxford. From 1969 to 1970, Tsien was a teaching fellow at Balliol College, Oxford.

In 1970, Tsien went back to the United States, and became an assistant professor in the Department of Physiology at Yale University School of Medicine from 1970 to 1974. From 1974 to 1979, Tsien was an associate professor in the same department, and was promoted to full professor in 1979.

In 1988, Tsien went to Stanford and founded the Stanford University Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology, where he also served as the first chairman. From 1991 to 2001, Tsien was the Director Silvio Conte - National Institutes of Mental Health Center for Neuroscience Research. From 1988 to 2011, Tsien was the George D. Smith Professor at the Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology. From 2000-2011, Tsien served as Co-Director for the Stanford Brain Research Center.

Tsien did important work on calcium channels, their mechanisms and roles in cell signaling pathways. Tsien's research also helps us understand the long-term plasticity of synapses.

From 1987 to 1988, Tsien was the President of the Society of General Physiologists. In August 2000, Tsien also served the Section Chair of Neurobiology of the United States National Academy of Sciences. Tsien's youngest brother Roger Y. Tsien, a chemist, won the 2008 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

Selected honors & awards

  • 1985, Kenneth S. Cole Award (for contributions to membrane biophysics)
  • 1991, 1995, 1999, Kaiser Award for Outstanding and Innovative Teaching, from Stanford University
  • 1993, Magnes Prize, from Hebrew University, Jerusalem
  • 1994, elected to the United States Institute of Medicine
  • 1996, awardee "Perspectives in Physiology: Walter B. Cannon Memorial Lecture", from the American Physiological Society
  • 1996, elected to the Academia Sinica
  • 1997, elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences
  • 1998, elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
  • 2000, elected Fellow of the Biophysical Society
  • References

    Richard W. Tsien Wikipedia


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