Nobuo Suga
BornDecember 17, 1933
NationalityJapanese
Alma materTokyo Metropolitan University
Scientific career
FieldsBiology
InstitutionsWashington University
Doctoral advisorYatsuji Katsuki[1]

Nobuo Suga (born December 17, 1933[2]) is a Japanese biologist noted for his research on the neurophysiology of hearing, and echolocation in bats.[3]

Life

After earning a bachelor's degree in biology at Tokyo Metropolitan University in 1958, Nobuo studied for his doctoral thesis on the neurophysiology of hearing with Yatsuji Katsuki at the Tokyo Medical and Dental University. His early research attracted the attention of Vincent Wigglesworth of Cambridge University, a prominent insect researcher, and Donald Griffin of Harvard University, who studied bats. From there, his career took him to UCLA and UC San Diego School of Medicine, before finally arriving at Washington University in St. Louis. Suga became a U.S. citizen in 1993, prompted by an incident at St. Louis Lambert International Airport where a customs agent couldn't recognize Suga's picture on his green card, issued in 1966.[3]

Work

Suga's work revealed much about the location and function of auditory system in the brain. Whilst at Washington University in St. Louis, he mapped the areas of the bat brain involved in processing Doppler shift (velocity) information, and in processing distance information for echolocation. His recent work has focused on the plasticity of the auditory system mediated by cortico-cortical interactions and corticofugal feedback.

Selected publications

Honors and awards

References

  1. ^ Neurotree – Nobuo Suga Details
  2. ^ Larry R. Squire, ed. (2009), [PDF "Nobuo Suga"], The History of Neuroscience in Autobiography (in German), vol. 6, Oxford University Press, pp. 480–513, ISBN 978-0-19-538010-1 ((citation)): Check |url= value (help)
  3. ^ a b People