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Irwin B. Levitan, PhD, Elected Secretary of
the Society for Neuroscience
(Philadelphia, PA) –Irwin B. Levitan, PhD, has
been elected Secretary of the Society for Neuroscience. Levitan is Professor
and Chair of the Department of Neuroscience at the University
of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and Director of the Mahoney
Institute of Neurological Sciences. His two-year term will begin at the
Society’s 2004 Annual Meeting in October.
“Dr. Levitan will be taking on many responsibilities as Secretary
of the Society,” says Dr. Anne B. Young, current President of the
Society and Professor and Chair, Department of Neurology, at Massachusetts
General Hospital. “We look forward to his contributions.”
"I am honored by this recognition by my colleagues in the Society
for Neuroscience,” says Levitan, “and am enthusiastic about
playing a leadership role in the Society's important initiatives on behalf
of neuroscience research and education."
Levitan came to Penn in the fall of 1999 from Brandeis University, where
he had been founding Director of the Volen Center for Complex Systems.
At Penn, he has built upon a wealth of programmatic and administrative
experience in a highly interdisciplinary and interactive environment,
and his own research on neuronal activity and neuronal ion channels is
very highly regarded. A recipient of the McKnight Senior Investigator
Award in 1997, the Ranwell Caputto Award in 2001, and the McKnight Neuroscience
of Brain Disorders Award in 2004, he also has the distinction of receiving
the NIH Jacob Javits Neuroscience Investigator Award twice.
He has been senior editor for neuroscience for the Encyclopedia of Life
Sciences and a reviewing editor for the Journal of Neuroscience. The author
of many published papers, he is co-editor of Ion Channels and Receptors
and Neuropharmacology: Potassium Channels. He is the author of Neuromodulation:
The Biochemical Control of Neuronal Excitability and three editions
of The Neuron: Cell & Molecular Biology (all written with
L. K. Kaczmarek). He was named Director of the Mahoney Institute of Neurological
Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in 2002.
The Society for Neuroscience was formed in 1970 and is a nonprofit membership
organization of basic scientists and physicians who study the brain and
nervous system. The Society has grown from 500 members to more than 35,000
and is the world's largest organization of scientists devoted to the study
of the brain. The Society's primary goal is to promote the exchange of
information among researchers through its Journal of Neuroscience
and annual meeting, which is held each fall and attracts attendees from
around the globe. The Society is also devoted to education about the latest
advances in brain research and the need to make neuroscience research
a funding priority.
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