Steven Hyman,
M.D.
Director, National
Institute of Mental Health
Dr. Steven E. Hyman is Director of the National Institute of Mental
Health (NIMH), the component of the National Institutes of Health charged
with generating the knowledge needed to understand, treat and prevent
mental illness. Under Dr. Hyman's leadership, NIMH has heightened the
priority it gives to four broad areas: (1) fundamental research on brain,
behavior and genetics; (2) rapid translation of basic discoveries into
research on mental disorders; (3) research that directly impacts the
treatment of individuals with mental disorders, including clinical trials
and studies of treatment and preventive interventions in "real
world" settings; and (4) research on child development and childhood
mental disorders. Dr. Hyman continues to direct an active research program
in molecular neurobiology on the NIH campus (Bethesda, MD) focused on how
neurotransmitters, especially dopamine and glutamate, alter the expression
of genes in the striatum and thereby produce long-term changes in neural
function that can influence behavior.
Prior to his position at NIMH, Dr. Hyman was Professor of Psychiatry at
Harvard Medical School and Director of Psychiatry Research at
Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. He also taught neurobiology at
Harvard Medical School and was the first faculty Director of Harvard
University's Interfaculty Initiative in Mind, Brain and Behavior. In
addition to his scientific writings, Dr. Hyman has authored and edited
several widely used clinical texts. He serves on several review and
advisory boards including the Riken Brain Sciences Institute in Japan, the
Max Planck Institute in Germany and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in
the United States. Dr. Hyman received his B.A. from Yale in 1974 (summa
cum laude) and his M.A. from the University of Cambridge in 1976, where he
was a Mellon fellow studying the history and philosophy of science. He
received his M.D. from Harvard Medical School (cum laude) in 1980.
Following an internship in medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH),
a residency in psychiatry at McLean Hospital and a clinical fellowship in
neurology at MGH, he was postdoctoral fellow at Harvard in molecular
biology.
Last revised: January 23, 2007
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