Ryszard Przewłocki | |
Birth Date: | 25 October 1943 |
Citizenship: | Polish |
Alma Mater: | AGH University of Science and Technology Jagiellonian University |
Occupation: | Neurobiologist Neuropharmacologist |
Ryszard Przewłocki (born October 25, 1943) is a Polish neurobiologist and neuropharmacologist, professor of medical sciences, professor at the Institute of Pharmacology of the Polish Academy of Sciences, member of the Polish Academy of Sciences, Polish Academy of Learning and Academia Europaea, and one of the most frequently cited Polish scientists in the field of biomedicine after 1965,[1] who in his youth was also an actor of experimental theatre Teatr 38 in Kraków, and episodically a film actor.
In 1962, he passed matura in the Bartłomiej Nowodworski High School. Then he studied automation at the Electrical Department of the AGH University of Science and Technology in Kraków (1962–1967) and psychology at the Jagiellonian University (1966–1970).[2]
During his studies he was an actor at Teatr 38, Kraków's experimental theater. He made a theatre debut in 1963 in the performance 23 typescript pages. The performance received the first prize at the Festival of Amateur Poetry Theaters in Poznań, where Julian Przyboś was the chairman of the jury. Later, Przewłocki appeared in plays such as the cowboy-style adaptation of An Ancient Tale in the staging of Mieczysław Święcicki based on the libretto by Aleksander Bandrowski. He played the main roles in the plays directed by Helmut Kajzar: King Richard III in Shakespeare's Richard III and Nathan in The Judges of Stanisław Wyspiański. In addition, he played in the adaptation of Günter Grass's Cat and Mouse directed by Jan Güntner, as well as in Falling and The Book of Job directed by Bogusław Hussakowski.
With the ensemble of Teatr 38 he took part in many theater festivals, performing among others in Nancy and Zagreb, Parma, Erlangen and touring in many Spanish cities. In 1969, he appeared in the short film of Julian Antoniszczak In the Clutches of Sex (W szponach seksu). After many years, he returned to acting – he played the television presenter in the etudes Hydrophobia (2013) and Ad maiorem pastae gloriam (2017) directed by Franciszek Vetulani.[3]
In 1969 he started working at the then Department of Pharmacology of the Polish Academy of Sciences, in the Laboratory of Neuropharmacology. There, in 1975, after transforming the department into an independent Institute, he obtained Ph.D. in the field of natural sciences and assumed the position of a senior assistant. In the years 1977–1979 he obtained a Max-Planck scholarship and completed a post-doctoral internship at the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry in Munich. He obtained his habilitation in neuropharmacology in 1986 at the Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology in Warsaw. The following year he completed a scientific internship at the Institute of Mental Health in Ann Arbor, Michigan. In 1992 he received the title of professor of medical sciences.[4] In the years 1995–1996 he was a scholarship holder of the Fulbright Foundation at the Scripps Research Institute in San Diego. From 1986 he is a member of the Scientific Council of the Institute of Pharmacology of the Polish Academy of Sciences. He was one of the organizers of the Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology at UNESCO/PAN, where he was a professor (1996–1998) and a member of the International Advisory Committee (1998–2008).
In the years 1989–1993 he was the Head of the Neuropeptide Research Department at the Institute of Pharmacology of the Polish Academy of Sciences and from 1993 to 2017 the Head of the Department of Molecular Neuropharmacology. From 1999 he was a professor at the Department of Neurobiology and Neuropsychology at the Institute of Applied Psychology at the Jagiellonian University, from 2004 he was the Head of this department. He was the supervisor of three postdoctoral dissertations and promoter of fifteen doctoral dissertations and about 80 MA theses. He published over 200 original research works (among others in Science and Nature) and dozens of reviews and popular science works.
From 2005 he was a member of the IBRO Central and Eastern European Regional Committee, and from 2008 to 2013 the chairman of this organization. In 2013–2016 he was elected and was chairman of the FENS/IBRO Schools organization. He is a member of the Polish Society for the Study of the Nervous System, and in 2005–2007 he was its president. He is a member of the Committee of the Neurobiology of the Polish Academy of Sciences, in the years 1998–2001 he was the vice-chairman of this committee. In the years 2008–2013 he was a member of the National Committee for Cooperation with the International Council of Sciences at the Presidium of the Polish Academy of Sciences. In 2005 he was elected a correspondent member of the Medical Faculty of the Polish Academy of Learning and in 2018 he became a full member. Since 2007, he has been an honorary member of the Polish Society for the Study of Pain. He is a member of international scientific societies (including IASP, EFIC, FENS, SFN, INRC). In 2019 he was elected a correspondent member of the Polish Academy of Sciences.
He was a member of the editorial committee of the journal Life Science (1990–2006), he is currently a member of the editorial committee of the European Journal of Pharmacology (from 2004) and Addiction Biology (since 2009).
He is married to Barbara Przewłocka, a neuropharmacologist, professor of medical sciences at the Institute of Pharmacology of the Polish Academy of Sciences and a correspondent member of the Polish Academy of Learning. He has two sons, Mikołaj and Szymon.