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Professor Ian Russell

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Professor Ian Russell

Ian Russell is a sensory neuroscientist with backgrounds in Physics, Marine Biology, and Medical Neuroscience. His research interests are in hearing including the workings of the cochlea, especially those responsible for normal hearing and hearing impairment as a consequence of genetic mutation, noise, and age-related hearing loss. He is also interested in the specialised cochlear mechanisms that underpin echolocation by bats and acoustic behaviour of mosquitoes and the specialised hearing mechanisms that form the basis for this behaviour.

He no longer teaches but was involved for nearly 40 years in initiating and running undergraduate majors in Neurobiology, Medical Neuroscience and Cognitive Neuroscience. He also initiated and ran a successful Medical Research Council (MRC) funded graduate training programme for PhD students and a very successful joint research training programme for early career (registrar) ENT surgeons.

Ian-Russell

Professor Ian Russell
Professor of Neurobiology

My research interests

I am a neuroscientist who studies the molecular biology, cellular biology and biophysics of the normal function and dysfunction of the cochlea in relation to its role in hearing and deafness. I have studied cochlear mechanisms involved in echolocation by bats. I also investigate acoustic behaviour and the physiology of the auditory system by mosquitoes.

Research activity

Current research projects

  • Research on the mammalian cochlea

  • Humming in tune: sex and species recognition by mosquitoes on the wing

Previous research projects

  • Echolocation by bats

Research centres and groups

Sensory Neuroscience Research Group 

Social media

 

Contact me

Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences
Moulsecoomb
91¶¶Òõ
BN2 4GJ

Telephone: +441273641120
Email: I.Russell@brighton.ac.uk

 

Biography

I was in the first cohort of 11+ entry to Chatham Technical School where I became interested in physics and engineering and took Zoology at Chatham Technical College. I went on to study marine biology and physics at Queen Mary College, University of London under the inspirational tutelage of Professors Eric Smith and Gordon Newell. A Commonwealth Studentship in 1964 to study the significance for fishes of underwater noise under the supportive guidance of David Randall at the University of British Columbia began an endless cycle of grant applications that has kept me in continuous research funding to date. On the basis of presenting a paper on the lateral line system at a meeting in New York I was invited by Hans Lissman, the discoverer of electroreception and electro-communication by fishes, to complete my PhD in Cambridge with a research studentship at Trinity Hall. My research was on a multidisciplinary approach to the efferent control of the lateral line system, which enabled me to consult with experts in widely different research fields all of which would now be classified as Neuroscience and who met at the Saturday Club (the foundation of Neuroscience at Cambridge) in an attic above my lab in Zoology. Following completion of my PhD, I won research fellowships at Magdalene and with the SRC (BBSRC) but spent most of my time at the Plymouth Marine lab working together with Barry Roberts on the lateral lines of dogfish and their functional significance during swimming. We were supported by the stimulating discussion, insight and encouragement of the director Eric Denton and Sir John Gray. During this period, I won a Royal Society Research Fellowship to work with Åke Flock on the cellular basis of sensory transduction in lateral line hair cells and its efferent control. The year in Stockholm was an intense and incredibly rewarding period. Åke was a brilliant, imaginative, innovative and very kind person who made the experience productive and enjoyable. Immediately at the end of the year (1970), I took up a lectureship in Neurobiology at the University of Sussex. Possibly the first ever appointment of its kind. The exciting challenge was to be part of the team of biologists and experimental psychologist led by Richard Andrew who designed and initiated the first undergraduate Neurobiology major. Later, I assembled majors in Cognitive Neuroscience, Medical Neuroscience and contributed to Psychology with Neuroscience. Through collaboration with my friend and colleague, Peter Sellick, we defied reason and the BBSRC and made intracellular recordings from sensory cells in the mammalian cochlea. So began research with stimulating and productive colleagues and research students and funded initially from unclaimed prize money from the Reader’s Digest, initiated by the divine intervention of Colin Blakemore, and then largely through programme grants from the MRC and Wellcome Trust which continues at 91¶¶Òõ under the direction of Andrei Lukashkin. Andrei has been pivotal to the research since he joined the lab in 1995 as a remarkable research student who won a Wellcome Prize Studentship in Mathematical Biology to support his DPhil. We continue another line of research on audition and auditory behaviour of mosquitoes begun by chance following a fairly coherent conversation in a pub in Lewes with Gay Gibson, which is overseen by Patricio Simoes who has taken the research in new and exciting directions. 

Research output

Awards

I was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1989.

I was awarded the Award of Merit of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology for my research on the cochlea and for research on mosquito hearing in 2010. This award is the premier award in my research field.

I was elected a fellow of the Royal Biological Society in 2012.

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