Eli Vakil | |
Birth Date: | 4 March 1953 |
Birth Place: | Tunisia |
Citizenship: | Israeli |
Alma Mater: | Bar Ilan University, CUNY Graduate Center |
Organization: | Bar Ilan University |
Spouse: | Tamar |
Children: | 3 |
Awards: | Distinguished Career Award of the International Neuropsychological Society |
Eli Vakil (born March 4, 1953) is an Israeli clinical neuropsychologist. He is a professor emeritus and former departmental chairman of the Department of Psychology,[1] and the head of the Memory and Amnesia Lab at the Gonda (Goldschmied) Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center at Bar Ilan University.[2] He also served as the director of the Rehabilitation Center for Veterans after Traumatic Brain-Injury (TBI) in Jaffa, Israel.[3]
In 1974–1976, Vakil studied at Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, graduating with a B.A. in psychology. He received his Ph.D. in clinical neuropsychology from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York in 1985. His dissertation was titled: "Encoding of frequency of occurrence, temporal order, and spatial location information by closed-head-injured and elderly subjects: Is it automatic?"Vakil is married with three children and lives in Ra'anana.[4]
Vakil started his career as a clinical neuropsychologist working in rehabilitation with patients who had sustained severe head-injuries. He worked at the Head Trauma Program at the Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine in New York University Medical Center, and in the Recanati National Institute for the Rehabilitation of the head-injured person in Israel.[5]
In the summer of 2017, he was a visiting scholar at the Kessler Foundation in West Orange, New Jersey.[6]
Vakil was chairman of the rehabilitation psychology section in the Israeli Psychological Association.[7]
He is a founding member of the Israeli Neuropsychological Society and has served as a board member of the International Neuropsychological Society (INS).[8]
Vakil has served on the INS Board of Governors (2004-2007), as an Associate Editor of the Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society (JINS) (2004-2008).[9]
In 2017 he received the Distinguished Career Award of the International Neuropsychological Society (INS).[10] In 2019 he received the Distinguished Career Award by the Israeli Psychological Association – Rehabilitation Psychology.[11]
Prof. Vakil has published extensively (over 150 scientific papers and book chapters) in the area of memory and memory disorders in various populations, such as traumatic brain injury patients, Parkinson’s disease patients, and the elderly.[12] [13] [14]