Michael Hasselmo

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Michael Hasselmo
Hasselmo in September 2014
Born (1962-11-12) November 12, 1962 (age 61)
Golden Valley, (Minnesota)
NationalityAmerican
CitizenshipUnited States
Alma materHarvard University
University of Oxford
AwardsRhodes Scholarship (1984)
Office of Naval Research Young Investigator Award (1993)
Hebb Award from International Neural Network Society (2015)
Scientific career
FieldsNeuroscience, Psychology
InstitutionsBoston University
Thesis Representation and storage of visual information in the temporal lobe.  (1988)
WebsiteWebsite at Boston University

Michael Hasselmo is an American

computational modeling. In addition to his peer-reviewed publications, Hasselmo wrote the book How We Remember: Brain Mechanisms of Episodic Memory.[1]

Grid-like firing pattern of a cell in the entorhinal cortex as an animal explores an open-field arena.

Education and early life

Hasselmo grew up in Golden Valley, Minnesota. His father Nils Hasselmo was a professor of Scandinavian languages and literature, and later the president of the University of Minnesota and the president of the Association of American Universities (AAU). Hasselmo graduated summa cum laude in 1984 from Harvard University with a special concentration in behavioral neuroscience. At the University of Oxford, he completed a DPhil from the Department of Experimental Psychology in 1988 based on unit recording of face-responsive neurons in the monkey temporal lobe.

Hasselmo is married to Professor Chantal Stern and father of two children.

Career and research

Trajectory and firing locations for an example grid cell recorded within the Hasselmo lab

From 1988 to 1991, Hasselmo completed a postdoctoral fellowship in the Division of

theta rhythm.[5][6]

In his current role as the director of the Center for Systems Neuroscience at Boston University, his laboratory studies the oscillatory dynamics of the retrosplenial cortex (e.g., egocentric boundary cells[7] and head direction cells), the entorhinal cortex (e.g., grid cells,[8] head direction cells, and speed modulated cells[9]) and the hippocampus (e.g., time cells,[10][11] place cells and context-dependent splitter cells). Additionally, Hasselmo’s modeling work include network level models and detailed biophysical models. Publications from the lab address the function of theta rhythm oscillations in the encoding of information in the hippocampus and related cortical structures, building on his earlier models of the role of acetylcholine in regulating mechanisms of encoding and consolidation.

Notable lab alumni include Prof. Mark Brandon, Prof. Thom Cleland, Prof. Holger Dannenberg, Prof. Amy Griffin, Prof. Lisa Giocomo, Prof. James Heys, Prof. Marc Howard, Prof. Jake Hinman and many more.

Awards and honors

International Neural Network Society (INNIS) Board of Governors in July 2003 1. Harold Szu 2. Wlodzislaw Duch 3. Kunihiko Fukushima 4. Lee A. Feldkamp 5. DeLiang Wang 6. Bernard Widrow 7. Erkki Oja 8. Lotfi A. Zadeh 9. Michael Hasselmo 10. Stephen Grossberg 11. Gail Carpenter 12. Donald Wunsch 13. David G. Brown 14. David Casasent 15. Daniel S. Levine 16. John G. Taylor 17. William B. Levy 18. Walter Jackson Freeman III 19. George G. Lendaris

Hasselmo is on the editorial board of a number of scientific journals, including Hippocampus, Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, and Behavioral Neuroscience. Previously, Hasselmo was on the editorial board of Science. Prior to attending University of Oxford, Hasselmo received a Rhodes scholarship. In 2003, Hasselmo was President of the International Neural Network Society (INNIS); he served on the board prior to and after holding the presidential position. Additionally Hasselmo was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2018 and as a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in 2011. He’s received the Hebb Award from the International Neural Network Society recognizing achievement in Biological Learning, and was appointed as a William Fairfield Warren Distinguished Professor.

References

  1. ^ Hasselmo, Michael (2012). How we remember: Brain mechanisms of episodic memory. MIT Press.
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