Dr. Samuel H. Barondes
Samuel H. Barondes, M.D. is
Jeanne and Sanford Robertson Professor of Neurobiology and Psychiatry
and
Director of the Center for Neurobiology and Psychiatry,
University of California San Francisco (UCSF).
Sam has been a professor at the University of California since 1970,
first at its San Diego campus and, since 1986, at its San Francisco
campus, where he was, for seven years, chair of the Department of
Psychiatry and Director of Langley Porter Psychiatric
Institute.
He is author of more than 200
original research
articles. He is a member or fellow of several societies, including the
Institute of Medicine. From 1989 to 1998, he was president of the
McKnight
Endowment Fund for Neuroscience. He recently served as chair of the
Board of Scientific Counselors of the National Institute of Mental
Health. In 2000, he was the 30th J. Robert Oppenheimer Memorial
Lecturer.
In addition to his research publications, He has written three
books:
Molecules and Mental Illness,
Mood Genes: Hunting for
Origins of Mania and Depression, and
Better Than Prozac:
Creating the
Next Generation of Psychiatric Drugs.
Read the
full list of his publications!
Sam earned his B.A. from Columbia College in 1954 and his M.D. at the
Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1958.
He was trained in clinical medicine and psychiatry at several Harvard
teaching hospitals (Peter Bent Brigham, McLean, and Massachusetts
General). He learned to do research in molecular biology at the National
Institutes of Health. Thereafter, he devoted himself to applying
the new sciences of molecular biology and molecular genetics to
psychiatry.
Read his
autobiography published in
A History of Neuroscience in
Autobiography, Volume 5.
Read his Edge talk
New Pills for the Mind. Watch his Edge
video.