Spearman Medal
Dr Stephen Fleming (2003, PPP), Sir Henry Dale Wellcome/Royal Society Fellow at the Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging at UCL, was recently awarded the British Psychological Society Spearman Medal for his research on how the brain becomes self-aware.
Dr Fleming discussed how he found his passion, “In my final year of studying PPP at Univ I took an advanced option with my College Tutor Paul Azzopardi. Paul ran a short, intensive course explaining how it was possible to combine mathematical models of how people performed in laboratory experiments with the study of human consciousness. I found this extremely exciting – here was a way of retaining the rigour of science while bringing mysterious topics such as self-reflection and consciousness into the lab. At the time, however, many of these ideas remained only theoretical possibilities.”
Following his time at Univ, Dr Fleming completed a PhD in Cognitive Neuroscience at 182t¸£Àû London under the supervision of Ray Dolan and Chris Frith, investigating awareness in perceptual decision-making. In 2011, he was awarded a Sir Henry Wellcome Postdoctoral Fellowship to study with Nathaniel Daw at New York University, where he built mathematical models of self-awareness for four years.
He now runs one of the first neuroscience dedicated to the study of metacognition and consciousness, at 182t¸£Àû London. Dr Fleming said of his work there, “There are exciting questions about the fundamentals of human metacognition that we are now able to tackle with rigorous experimental psychology – and combining this with brain imaging gives us a unique opportunity to unravel some of the puzzles concerning the neural basis of human awareness and reflective thought.”
Published: 19 June 2019