Susan Greenfield
Senior Research Fellow at Lincoln College
Oxford University, United Kingdom
Profile – Baroness Greenfield (b. 1950)
Baroness Greenfield is a British scientist and writer and in 2001 was made a ‘People’s Peer’ in the House of Lords, where she has spoken on education, the dangers of drugs, and women in science. She was the first woman ever to present the Royal Institution’s Christmas Lectures and was Director of the Royal Institution from 1998 to 2010 until made redundant. She has argued that modern technology is harming children’s brains, but has been criticised for not providing any evidence. Her research has included studies of addiction and reward, and the treatment of ADHD, Parkinson’s, and Alzheimer’s disease. She has written several books relevant to human consciousness.
More biographical information
Publications
Her list of publications relevant to consciousness
Selected publications relevant to consciousness
Greenfield, S. (2000). Brain story: Why do we think and feel as we do? London: BBC.
Greenfield, S. (2017) A day in the life of the brain: The neuroscience of consciousness from dawn till dusk. London: Penguin.
Greenfield, S. A., & Collins, T. F. (2005). A neuroscientific approach to consciousness. Progress in Brain Research, 150, 11–587. Full chapter here.
Koch, C., & Greenfield, S. (2007). How does consciousness happen? Scientific American, 297(4) 76–83.Full text here.
Video
Brain story. BBC documentary series presented by Greenfield, 6 episodes
Technology and the human mind. TEDxOxford, July 2014
The hard problem of consciousness. Debate with Koch, Royal Institution, London, June 2012
Journey to the centre of the brain. RI Christmas Lectures, London 1994