Arnold J. Mandell
Arnold J. Mandell is an American neuroscientist and psychiatrist. Born in 1934, in Chicago, Illinois, he received his B.A. from Stanford University in 1954 and his M.D. from Tulane University in 1958. Founding chairman in 1969 of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego,
he was, at the time of his appointment, the youngest physician ever appointed as a chairman of a medical school psychiatry program in the U.S. An early biological psychiatrist, the department was the first in the U.S. to be biologically oriented. After leaving UCSD, he has been involved in studying the basic science and applied mathematics of brain activity and behavior.
He is the director of research of the Cielo Institute, a clinical professor of psychiatry at Emory University, a research professor of health and wellness at University of North Carolina, Asheville, professor of psychiatry at University of California, San Diego, visiting scientist at the Core MEG Lab at the National Institutes of Health, and a senior research associate at Scripps Research Institute.
Awards
- 1984 MacArthur Fellows Program
- A.E. Bennett Research Prize of the Society for Biological Psychiatry
- 1994 Senior Humboldt Prize Fellowship in Dynamical Systems, Bremen University
- Foundations Fund Research Prize of the American Psychiatric Association
- Johananoff International Prize Fellow in Psychopharmacology.
Partial list of works
- Psychochemical Research in Man: Methods, Strategy, and Theory
- New Concepts in Neurotransmitter Regulation
- The Nightmare Season
- Coming of Middle Age: A Journey
- Perspectives in biological dynamics and theoretical medicine
- , in Modern Psychoanalysis: New Directions and Perspectives, Editor Judd Marmor, Transaction Publishers, 1995,
- Don Juan in the Mind - article - publication unknown - likely from the 1970s