Dugald Cameron, OBE, FCSD, FRSA (born 1939) is a Scottish artist and industrial designer.
[3] He subsequently worked as a freelance industrial designer, during which time he designed a prototype medical ultrasound machine, the Lund machine (aka the Sundén machine, after Bertil Sundén of Lund University, who commissioned it), and the production version, the Diasonograph, working with medical physicist Tom Brown.
He was a member of the academic advisory panel on the development of displays at Glasgow's Riverside Museum, but criticised the final arrangements, saying "The building itself and its historic setting is splendid, but I think that the exhibition, and the way it has been handled, is a bit dumbed-down.
I don’t think the exhibition design is satisfactory at all - it seems to be [more] visual effect than scholarly effort.
"[5] He was awarded the Lord Provost of Glasgow's Gold Medal for Education in 1998[6] and appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2000 New Year Honours, "for services to Art and Design".