Pioneers in Visual Neuroscience Win $1 Million Prize

Four researchers in the United States and Germany have been awarded a $1 million prize by the Champalimaud Foundation for their work on the human brain's ability to distinguish faces, shapes, and colors. Their research has advanced understanding and treatment of visual and cognitive disorders.


Devdiscourse News Desk | Lisbon | Updated: 12-09-2024 07:24 IST | Created: 12-09-2024 07:24 IST
Pioneers in Visual Neuroscience Win $1 Million Prize
This image is AI-generated and does not depict any real-life event or location. It is a fictional representation created for illustrative purposes only.
  • Country:
  • Portugal

Four researchers working in the United States are sharing a $1 million prize from a Portuguese foundation for their work on how the human brain distinguishes faces, shapes, and colors.

Americans Margaret Livingstone of Harvard Medical School, Nancy Kanwisher of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Doris Tsao of the University of California, Berkeley, and Germany's Winrich Freiwald of Rockefeller University won the Champalimaud Foundation's Vision Award 2024, a statement said Wednesday.

Their collective work has driven significant progress in the field of visual neuroscience, the statement said, bringing new understanding of facial recognition processes as well as new approaches to vision disorders.

Their research has paved the way for the treatment of such visual problems as dyslexia, and improves understanding of how to combat cognitive decline, including dementia, according to the foundation.

(With inputs from agencies.)

Give Feedback