Search Results - Terry E. Robinson

Terry Earl Robinson

Terry Earl Robinson is a biopsychologist and neuroscientist, and the Elliot S. Valenstein Distinguished University Professor of Psychology & Neuroscience at The University of Michigan (Ann Arbor).

Robinson is most known for his research on the persistent psychological and neurobiological effects of repeated drug use, and how these may contribute to addiction and relapse. From 2010 onwards, his research has focused on how individual differences in attributing incentive salience to reward-associated cues may contribute to impulse-control disorders like addiction. He has published over 260 articles, edited two books and was listed on ISI HighlyCited.com as one of the highest cited (top 0.5%) scientists in Neuroscience. His papers have been cited over 62,000 times and his h-Index is 110. He is the recipient of APA's D.O Hebb Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award, Distinguished Scientific Contributions Award, and Neal Miller Lecturer, EBPS' Distinguished Scientist Award, APS' William James Fellow Award for Lifetime Achievement, and Grawemeyer Award for Outstanding Ideas in Psychology. He has also received The Henry Russel Lectureship, which is the U-M's highest honor for senior faculty, a Honorary Doctor of Science (honoris causa) degree from the University of Lethbridge, Canada, and was listed on the Stanford University Names World's Top 2% Scientists in 2021.

Robinson is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), a Charter Fellow of the American Psychological Society (APS), and a Fellow of Eastern Psychological Association. He was President of the European Behavioral Pharmacology Society (EBPS) from 2015 to 2017. In 2003, he served as chair for the Gordon Research Conference on Catecholamines at The Queen's College, Oxford. He has participated in multiple NIH grant review panels, and held a NIH Research Career Development, NIDA Senior Scientist, and NIDA-funded MERIT Award. In addition, he was the Editor-in-Chief of the journal, ''Behavioural Brain Research'', from 1996 until 2010. Provided by Wikipedia
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