Valentino Braitenberg

Valentino Braitenberg

Valentino Braitenberg
Born Valentino Braitenberg
(1926-06-18)June 18, 1926
Bolzano, South Tyrol, Italy
Died September 9, 2011(2011-09-09) (aged 85)
Tübingen, Germany
Nationality Italian
Fields Neuroscience, Cybernetics
Institutions Naples, Tübingen
Alma mater University of Innsbruck

Valentino Braitenberg (or Valentin von Braitenberg; born 18. June 1926 in Bolzano, Italy; died 9. September 2011 in Tübingen, Germany) was a neuroscientist and cyberneticist. He was former director at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics in Tübingen, Germany.

His book Vehicles: Experiments in Synthetic Psychology became famous in Robotics and among Psychologists, in which he described how hypothetical analog vehicles (a combination of sensors, actuators and their interconnections), though simple in design, can exhibit behaviors akin to aggression, love, foresight, and optimism.[1] These have come to be known as Braitenberg vehicles. His pioneering scientific work was concerned with the relation between structures and functions of the brain.

Life

Valentino Braitenberg grew up in the province of South Tyrol. Braitenberg's father was Senator Carl von Braitenberg,[2] a member of the South Tyrolean nobility.

Since the age of 6, Braitenberg grew up bilingual in the two languages Italian and German. German was spoken at home and all schooling was Italian, conform to the historic context. The humanistic Lyceum-Gymnasium (High school) in Bolzano gave him an excellent classic education including Italian literature. The German literary education was based on the classical writers he found in the extensive home library. In addition, he trained as a violinist at the Conservatorio Claudio Monteverdi in Bolzano and became a talented violinist and violist.

Braitenberg studied Medicine and Psychiatry at the Universities of Innsbruck and Rome between 1945 and 1954. He accompanied his studies with chamber music performances with his viola and violin, where he developed a repertoire of violin-piano duos with a colleague. . He completed his medical training with an internship at the psychiatric clinic in Rome, where he decided to prefer a scientific career dedicated to the understanding of brain functions. He spent a few years at Yale University in New Haven (USA) when he was invited by Prof. Eduardo Caianiello in 1958 to set up a biocybernetics research group at the Physics Institute of the University of Naples Federico II, the “Laboratorio di Cibernetica”. Between 1958 and 1968 he was adjunct Professor of Cybernetics at the Physics Institute of the University of Naples. In 1963 Braitenberg earned the Libera Docenza in Cybernetics and Information Theory, the title that used to grant access to Professorship at Italian Universities. From 1968 until his retirement in1994 he was co-founder and co-Director of the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics in Tübingen and Honorary Professor at the Universities of Tübingen and Freiburg. After 1994 he was appointed Professor at the Specialization School in Scienze Motorie (Motoric Sciences) at the Rovereto branch of the University of Rovereto. From 1998 to 2001 he was president of the Laboratorio di Scienze Cognitive at the University of Trento in Rovereto.

Braitenberg received an honorary doctorate from the University of Salzburg in 1995.

Braitenberg was married to the painter Elisabeth Hanna. They had three children, Margareta, Carla, and Zeno.

Works

According to Maier (2012),[3] Braitenberg's interest in understanding the brain began in 1948, when he looked for the first time at some human brain tissue under a microscope. He said that although the connections seemed unbelievably complex, Braitenberg eventually realised that computers could serve as a useful model for understanding the brain. She said that he made seminal contributions to understanding the neuroanatomy of the cerebellum, the wiring of the eye of the fly, and the organisation of the human cerebrum.

Braitenberg published more than 180 scientific works during his lifetime, not including abstracts, reprints, translations into different languages, and different editions of some of his works.[4] According to a search of Google Scholar in September 2014, Braitenberg's book, Vehicles: Experiments in synthetic psychology, had received at least 2622 citations.

Books published by Braitenberg include:

Honours and namesakes

Awards named after Braitenberg

Literature

See also

References

  1. http://www.psych.ucsb.edu/~beall/vehicles.pdf
  2. Z am Sonntag, Nr. 37/2011 vom 11. September 2011; S.3
  3. Maier, E. (2012). Spying on God. MaxPlanckResearch Magazine, 12(3), 86-87. Retrieved from http://www.mpg.de/6348834/S005_Flashback_086-087.pdf
  4. http://www.braitenberg.eu
  5. http://www.nncn.de/en/bernstein-association
  6. http://www.nncn.de/en/bernstein-association/valentino-braitenberg-award-for-computational-neuroscience
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