Brenda Milner

Brenda Milner
Milner at TEDxMcGill in 2011
Born
Brenda Langford

(1918-07-15) 15 July 1918
Manchester, England
Alma materNewnham College, Cambridge
McGill University
Known forStudy of memory and cognition; Work with patient H.M.
Spouse
(m. 1944; died 2018)
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsNeuropsychology
InstitutionsMcGill University, Montreal Neurological Institute
ThesisIntellectual effects of temporal-lobe damage in man (1952)
Doctoral advisorDonald Olding Hebb
Doctoral students

Brenda Milner (née Langford; born 15 July 1918) is a British-Canadian neuropsychologist who has contributed extensively to the research literature on various topics in the field of clinical neuropsychology. Milner is a professor in the Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery at McGill University and a professor of Psychology at the Montreal Neurological Institute. As of 2020, she holds more than 25 honorary degrees and she continued to work in her nineties. Her work covers many aspects of neuropsychology including her lifelong interest in the involvement of the temporal lobes in episodic memory. She is sometimes referred to as one of the founders of neuropsychology and has been essential in its development. She received the Balzan Prize for Cognitive Neuroscience in 2009, and the Kavli Prize in Neuroscience, together with John O'Keefe, and Marcus E. Raichle, in 2014. She turned 100 in July 2018.