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Science of Vision
Stanley Klein, PhD
Alma materPh.D Physics – Brandeis 1967 B.S. Physics – Caltech 1961
Known forResearch in Neurotechnology
AwardsFirst Place - California State mathematics competition, 1956
Scientific career
FieldsOptometry, Human Vision, Neurometrics, Consciousness
InstitutionsUniversity of California at Berkeley

Stanley A. Klein is currently (2009) a Professor of Vision Science and Optometry at the University of California at Berkeley and a member of the Visual Processing Laboratory. He is a consulting editor for Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics a publication of the Psychonomic Society which promotes the communication of scientific research in psychology and allied sciences. Its members must hold a PhD degree or equivalent and must have published significant research. His major area of research has been neurotechnology, a field of science that studies the body and mind through the nervous system by electronics and mechanisms. He is the co-chair for the SPIE (an international society on the science and application of light) meetings on human vision.

Professional Experience

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Klein's major area of research has been neurometrics and neurotechnology. Neuroscience with the development of non-invasive human brain imaging now uses human subject volunteers, The questions being researched get at some of the fundamental questions of what it means to be human and to have a mind. The revolution in technologies that has made this maturation possible extends from gene to hospital bed-side and is now referred to as neurotechnology. Some examples of neurotechnology include the CAT scanner, fMRI, Magnetoencephalography (MEG), Positron emission tomography, high-throughput genetic sequencing, brain proteomics and psychopharmaceuticals. These technologies also include neural modeling simulations, biological computers, and human-brain interfaces (prosthetics).

  • 1967-1981 Assistant Prof. - Full Prof., Joint Science Dept., Claremont Colleges, Claremont, CA.
  • 1972-1973 Visiting Faculty, Psychology Dept., Stanford University, Stanford, CA.
  • 1974-1981 Visiting Associate, Division of Biology, Caltech, Pasadena, CA.
  • 1978-1979 Sabbatical at Harvard and Smith-Kettlewell Institute of Visual Science, San Francisco, CA.
  • 1981-1987 Professor, College of Optometry, University of Houston, Houston, Texas.
  • 1987-present Professor, University of California at Berkeley, School of Optometry ref

Recent Grants & Awards

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Human Vision Research
  • NIH/NEI, 5/1/00-4/30/03. $170,000 per year. "High Spatial Frequency Feature Acuity in Spatial Vision."
  • CULAR, Collaborative UC-Los Alamos grant. 9/00 - 8/03. $45,000 per year. "Locating sources of brain activity in space and time"
  • NIH/NEI, 5/1/04-4/30/09. $200,000 per year. "High Spatial Frequency Feature Acuity in Spatial Vision."
  • NIH/NEI, 7/1/04-6/30/07. $275,000. "Where and when of cortical activity measured with EEG and fMRI."
  • DARPA subcontract, 10/1/05-9/30/06. $155,110. "Neurotechnology for Image Analysts."

All awards [1]

Publications

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Complete listings:

  • Publications from 2000 - 2002, with commentaries [2]
  • Publications from 1996 - 1999, with commentaries [3]
  • Publications from 1993 - 1996, with commentaries [4]
  • Commentaries on Stanley Klein's Research Articles [5]

National Committees and Editorships

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  • Optical Society of America, Vision Advisory Committee (1984-1989)
  • Ad Hoc Study Sections for NIH (1986, 1987, 2000, 2001)
  • Chaired meetings at annual meetings of Optical Society, ARVO,
  • Consulting editor for Perception and Psychophysics (1991-present).
  • Co-chair for the SPIE meeting on Human Vision (1992- present).
  • Co-chair for the SID meeting on Human Factors (1992-1993).
  • Topical editor of Journal of Optical Society for Vision (1990, 1992- 1999).
  • Executive committee of Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness (1994 - 1997)ref

Klein has for many years been a member of the Institute on Religion in an Age of Science (IRAS) where he has been active in the discussions on Religious Naturalism and how it relates to Reconstructionist Judaism.

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