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Merge pull request #27 from Humphries-Lab/mdhumphries-patch-1
Update mark-humphries.md
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links:
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email: mark.humphries@nottingham.ac.uk
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home-page: https://drmdhumphries.medium.com/
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orcid: 0000-0002-1906-2581
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google-scholar: AKR7P-4AAAAJ
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github: mdhumphries
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bluesky: markdhumphries.bsky.social
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twitter: markdhumphries
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linkedin: mark-humphries-65a460212
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github: mdhumphries
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google-scholar: AKR7P-4AAAAJ
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orcid: 0000-0002-1906-2581
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Mark Humphries is the Chair in Computational Neuroscience at the University of Nottingham, UK. He previously held the prestigious seven-year Senior Fellowship from the UK’s Medical Research Council; before that were a three-year fellowship at Ecole Normale Superieure in Paris, a literal stone’s throw from the Pantheon, and postdoctoral and PhD training at the University of Sheffield. His lab's research attempts to make sense of the collective activity of neurons - be they in the basal ganglia, the brainstem, the sensory and prefrontal cortex, and the sea-slug’s locomotion system - and how they all relate to behaviour. He finds the pleasures of network theory a useful diversion from the complexity of trying to understand the brain.
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Mark Humphries is a Chair in Computational Neuroscience at the University of Nottingham, UK. He previously held the prestigious seven-year Senior Fellowship from the UK’s Medical Research Council; before that were a three-year fellowship at Ecole Normale Superieure in Paris, a literal stone’s throw from the Pantheon, and postdoctoral and PhD training at the University of Sheffield. His lab's research attempts to make sense of the collective activity of neurons - be they in the basal ganglia, the brainstem, the sensory and prefrontal cortex, and the sea-slug’s locomotion system - and how they all relate to behaviour. He finds the pleasures of network theory a useful diversion from the complexity of trying to understand the brain.
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He writes essays for a popular audience at [The Spike](https://medium.com/the-spike), and is author of the popular science book ["The Spike: An Epic Journey Through the Brain in 2.1 Seconds"](https://press.princeton.edu/books/paperback/9780691241487/the-spike?_gl=1*147tsvi*_up*MQ..*_ga*OTA5MDEyMDc5LjE3MjM2NTY5Nzg.*_ga_N1W9JWKLY3*MTcyMzY1Njk3Ny4xLjEuMTcyMzY1NzAwOC4yOS4wLjE1ODIwMDA4NDI.) (Princeton University Press).

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