Green, Richard: transcript of a video interview (17-Dec-2015)
Series
History of Modern Biomedicine Interviews (Digital Collection);e2016035
History of Modern Biomedicine Interviews (Digital Collection);e2016036
History of Modern Biomedicine Interviews (Digital Collection);e2016037
History of Modern Biomedicine Interviews (Digital Collection);e2016038
History of Modern Biomedicine Interviews (Digital Collection);e2016039
History of Modern Biomedicine Interviews (Digital Collection);e2016040
History of Modern Biomedicine Interviews (Digital Collection);e2016041
History of Modern Biomedicine Interviews (Digital Collection);e2016042
History of Modern Biomedicine Interviews (Digital Collection);e2016043
History of Modern Biomedicine Interviews (Digital Collection);e2016044
DOI
10.17636/01013137
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Interview with Professor Richard Green, conducted by Professor Tilli Tansey, for the History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group, 17 December 2015, in the School of History, Queen Mary University of London. Transcribed by Mrs Debra Gee, and edited by Professor Tilli Tansey and Dr Apostolos Zarros. The project management and the technical support (filming and production) were undertaken by Mr Adam Wilkinson and Mr Alan Yabsley, respectively. Professor Richard Green PhD DSc (b. 1944) completed his PhD (1969) with Gerald Curzon and following two years at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), Washington, DC, with Erminio Costa, he joined David Grahame-Smith at the Medical Research Council (MRC) Clinical Pharmacology Unit in Oxford becoming Assistant Unit Director in 1981. In 1986 he was appointed Director of the new Astra Neuroscience Research Unit in London. In 1996 he was appointed Director, Global Discovery CNS & Pain Control, for Astra. After retiring from AstraZeneca in 2007, he has continued psychopharmacology research in Nottingham, and is currently Honorary Professor of Neuropharmacology at Nottingham University. He was awarded the DSc by London University in 1988 and in 2010 was given the Lifetime Achievement Award by the British Association for Psychopharmacology. He is a President Emeritus of the British Pharmacological Society and a former President of the Serotonin Club.
Authors
Tansey EM
Green R
Tansey EM
Zarros A
Gee D
Yabsley A
Wilkinson A