The Anatomical Society Prize
Background
This is awarded biennially on the recommendation of Council to a distinguished morphological scientist.
Eligibility
Member or Non-Member
Awarded
Awards are made at two yearly intervals, in uneven years.
Queries
For further information contact the Executive Administrator at: headoffice@anatsoc.org.uk
Professor Roger Keynes is a member of the Department of Physiology, Development & Neuroscience, University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. In a research career spanning several decades, Prof Keynes has had a major influence on our current thinking on neural patterning during embryonic development. His most important contributions relate to the problem of segmental patterning in both central and peripheral nervous systems. He first recognised that motor and sensory nerves have to develop in line with neighbouring structures and demonstrated that the somites dictate the pathways through which motor and sensory nerves grow, generating a repeated pattern along the body axis. As early as 1985, he was the first to recognise that morphological subdivisions of the hindbrain represented real functional units. Since then, his research has concentrated primarily on understanding the molecular nature of the guidance cues in the somite that direct motor and sensory axons. More recently, his research has uncovered previously unsuspected influences between the mesoderm and the CNS, revealing that the notochord under the midbrain regulates the growth of the tectum and that the notochord might be intrinsically segmented. His contributions to neuroscience were recognised by his election to the Fellowship of the Academy of Medical Sciences in 2005. In addition to his extensive research work, Prof Keynes made significant contributions to both undergraduate and postgraduate teaching and examining. He has been an active member of the Anatomical Society for many years, has published in the Journal of Anatomy, and has contributed to a number of our meetings.
The Anatomical Society is delighted to announce that the recipient of the 2021 Anatomical Society Prize is Professor Gillian Morriss-Kay for her significant contributions in the field of morphological science.
The medal was presented to her in Dublin by Anatomical Society Past-President Professor Clive Lee.
The Anatomical Society is delighted to announce that the recipient of the 2019 Anatomical Society Prize is Professor Alan Boyde.
Professor Alan Boyde receiving the Anatomical Society Prize from Anatomical Society President Professor Stefan Przyborski at the Anatomical Society Winter Meeting 2019 in Lancaster
Alan Boyde is Professor of Mineralised Tissue Biology at Barts' and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London (QMUL). His focus is on high class optical and electron microscopy of all the hard tissues and their disease conditions, inventing and introducing new methods which are special to the field. His current interests include changes in bone with aging and in osteoporosis and osteoarthritis: articular cartilage: high density mineralised infill crack healing in calcified tissues: high density mineralised protrusions in articular cartilage: comparative micro-architecture of bone and responses to function and drugs: overload arthrosis in man and racehorse: studies of retrieved skeletal implants: special problems in implant microscopy: characterisation of the phenotype in mouse genetic models: and methods for correlating between methods. Alan serves on the Editorial Board of several bone and microscopy journals.
Professor Alan Boyde
He graduated BDS at The London Hospital Medical College (LHMC) in 1958, joined the Anatomy Dept there in 1959 as a junior demonstrator and started working with TEM and x-ray microscopy. His great good fortune was in discovering SEM at the Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge [with V. Roy Switsur in 1959] and at the Engineering Lab [with A.D. Gary Stewart in 1960]. He joined the Anat Soc 1962. His PhD in 1964 won him the Thomas Henry Huxley award of the Zoological Society. Alan received his first SEM grant, 1966, from SRC, which won him a transfer as Reader to Anatomy UCL under JZ Young in Feb 1967. Returned to his alma mater, now QMUL, in 2003. Alan served as President of the Anatomical Society from 2002-2004.
When not in the dark, likes cruising.
More from https://www.qmul.ac.uk/dentistry/people/profiles/professoralanboyde.html
Emeritus Professor Susan Standring
President of the Anatomical Society Professor D. Ceri Davies awarded Emeritus Professor Cheryll Tickle the Anatomical Society Medal in recognition of her contribution to embryological research at the Winter Meeting of the Anatomical Society at the University of Newcastle (December 16-18, 2013).