| Barrie Frost is
a world-renowned expert in sensory systems neuroscience who possesses
the rare talent to effectively and fluidly cross boundaries between
disciplines. As a consequence, he is able to take advantage of new
avenues of research and make transitions from excellent basic science
to concrete and valuable applications. In the citation for award
of the degree of Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, from Concordia University
(2000), Dr. Frost was described as having "a psychologist's
grasp of perceptual principles, a neurophysiologist's expertise
in recording neural signals and analyzing brain circuitry, an ethologist's
sense of adaptation to the natural environment and an engineer's
feel for the design of information processing and real-time control
systems." Dr. Frost's pioneering work in sensory neuroscience
has benefited from his wide observations of the natural world and
his profound knowledge of neurobiology in order to uncover the neural
processing and computations that underlie a diverse range of perceptual
and behavioural phenomena from the processing of motion, the visual
guidance of locomotion, sound localization, and auditory figure/ground
segregation to the neural mechanisms that guide bird and butterfly
migration. (http://pavlov/psych.queens.ca/~frost/).
Born in New Zealand, Barrie trained
first as a primary teacher and obtained his Teacher's Certificate
in 1959. Following completion of a Bachelor's (Hons) and Master's
degrees in Psychology from the University of Canterbury, New Zealand,
he traveled to Dalhousie University in 1964 where he completed his
PhD in 1967 under the joint supervision of the late Drs. Werner
Honig and Lorin Riggs (Brown University). Barrie then completed
a postdoctoral fellowship in the laboratory of Dr. Gerald Westheimer
at the University of California, Berkeley. There he met and formed
lasting friendships with Drs. Michael Land (Sussex) and Ken Nakajima
(Harvard) as well as other members of the extremely strong vision
group at Berkeley at the time. The discussions he held there with
these individuals had a lasting impact on his research. In 1969,
Barrie accepted a position in the Psychology Department at Queen's
University where he has remained ever since apart from the many
visits he has made to collaborate with colleagues abroad.
Arguably, at the root of Barrie's
success as a scientist has been his ability to synthesize his knowledge
of the behaviour of animals in their natural habitats with classic
(and sometimes forgotten) observations in perceptual psychology.
Also, for Barrie, selection of the best animal model to solve a
difficult research problem is crucial and often has explanatory
ramifications over the entire spectrum of life. The major threads
of his research interests became evident shortly after he arrived
at Queen's, as did his ability to extend basic work in the laboratory
to real-world applications. A particularly noteworthy example of
the latter was his invention of a tactile substitution device for
the deaf that presents sound vibrations to the skin so that users
can recognize environmental sounds and even human speech. This innovative
work drew heavily upon his knowledge of tactile perception and of
van Bekesey's work in audition.
A major focus of Barrie's fundamental
research has on motion perception and the mechanisms by which motion
is processed in the brain. His appreciation of the importance of
the relationship between a stimulus and its background rather than
the absolute magnitude of the stimulus itself led to his ground-breaking
observations of neurones that code for relative motion. Barrie's
work on pigeons has disclosed how the visual motion of objects (and
animals) is distinguished from motion of the image produced by eye,
head, and body movements. This line of inquiry has produced major
discoveries which include the identification of (1) specialized
brain structures and mechanisms that respond only to moving objects;
(2) populations of neurones that compute the variables governing
timely escape from approaching objects (time-to-collision); and
(3) other structures that extract self-produced visual motion which
control posture, balance, and locomotion. Frost's pioneering work
on the visual guidance of locomotion in pigeons, owls, and other
birds has significance far beyond avian physiology. He has demonstrated
that the avian visual system provides a wonderful model for all
vertebrate vision because it contains most of the structures common
to all vertebrates, organized in similar if not homologous parallel
pathways.
A second major avenue of research
for Barrie has been on audition. Using a broad range of research
techniques, including single-cell recording, computer-generated
stimuli, psychophysics, and detailed mathematical analysis, Barrie
and his colleagues have studied neural mechanisms for sound localization,
auditory figure/ground segregation, and similarities in the neural
computations for stereophonic hearing and stereopsis.
Underlying Frost's phenomenal productivity
is his engineering virtuosity. When his experimental goals require
equipment that does not exist, he builds it. Many innovative devices
in his laboratories have been constructed in workshops at Queen's
University, enabling him to pursue projects beyond the reach of
many other researchers. Moreover, he is quick to seize upon newly
developed technologies in order to approach research issues that
cannot easily be addressed by existing methods. For example, Frost
and his colleagues are intensively studying how fundamental perceptual
principles can be exploited to produce virtual realities and simulators.
These are used for innovative scientific research on problems that
could not be "cracked" by conventional methods, and for
the development of technologies that can be applied to both educational
and industrial teleoperational use. The Virtual Reality Lab, which
he and his team have designed and built, allows them to manipulate
relationships between visual, auditory, and balance cues and other
senses. His group is also employing new technologies that have made
it possible to record single neural brain activity and behaviours
in awake, naturally behaving animals, resulting in measures of unprecedented
accuracy and richness.
One ambitious new project, closely
linked to his wok on motion and making use of virtual reality technology
as well as complex mathematical correspondence theory, is the neural
basis of conspecific recognition. Recognition is required for familial
bonding and imprinting, which must occur at critical periods in
the lives of animals, with far reaching repercussions for survival.
A second new initiative involves Sooty Shearwaters, seabirds that
make migrations over distances of at least 50,000 km, returning
with unfailing accuracy to the same mate and burrow. The focus of
study here is on discovering what neural mechanism guides the birds
in their unerring navigation, including how information from their
sun compass, star compass, and magnetic compass are first detected
and then integrated with visual and olfactory landmarks. The birds
are tracked by the Argos satellite system and Frost's team has developed
a miniature GPS tracking and data-logging device. Already providing
vital information for ongoing behavioural ecology studies and conservation
efforts to Shearwaters and Albatross, the study will also extend
understanding of global atmospheric events (La Nino/La Nina), which
these birds' behaviour appears to predict ahead of current meteorological
observations. A third recent research initiative has been to build
a flight simulator to bring monarch butterfly migratory flight behaviour
into the laboratory. This ingenious device has captured long segments
of the monarch's migratory flight, and has produced the first clear
evidence of their use of a "time-compensated sun compass"
and sensitivity to simulated magnetic fields during migration.
During his career Barrie has received
numerous honours including the Rutherford Scholarship of the Royal
Society, the National Health Scholar Award, the James McKeen Cattel
Award, the Queen's University Prize for Excellence in Research,
and the Queen's Alumni Prize for Teaching Excellence in the same
year (1993)! He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, the
American Association for the advancement of Science, and the Canadian
Psychological Association, and in 1995 was named the first Max Bell
Fellow of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research. The Max
Bell Foundation supports outstanding researchers in pioneering initiatives
that can be expected to make important contributions and are likely
to have an impact on the lives of Canadians. In 1996 Dr. Frost was
awarded the Alexander von Humboldt Research Prize in Germany and
late last year he was named one of the three finalists of the 2002
NSERC Herzberg Medal, the most prestigious scientific prize in Canada.
Dr. Frost's energy, enthusiasm
and skill continue to drive an internationally renowned research
program. What cannot adequately be conveyed by a description of
his research accomplishments, however, is his generosity in nurturing
and promoting others' research. Far from jealously guarding his
work, he freely shares it and disseminates it where it will do the
most good. He has shown a particular genius for forming strong collaborative
relationships with other research labs nationally and internationally.
He is driven by the big, difficult questions, and continues to break
new ground. Barrie has also provided valuable leadership and guidance
as a member of many scientific advisory panels including the Natural
Sciences and Engineering Research Council's grant selection and
other committees, Medical Research Council committees, the Research
Council of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (he was
chair of the CIAR Advisory Committee on Artificial Intelligence
and Robotics), the U.S. National Academy of Science Workgroup on
Tactile Vocoders, and the 1997 NIH Space Neurolab Project Selection
Committee.
As one of the country's most innovative
scientists and one who possesses an unusual talent for conveying
his contagious enthusiasm for sensory neuroscience, Barrie richly
deserves the CSBBCS Hebb Award!
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