Richard A. Normann is a Distinguished Professor of Bioengineering at the University of Utah.
[1][2][3] He received his PhD in 1973 from UC Berkeley in electrical engineering.
[4] He received an honorary doctorate in 2012 from Miguel Hernández University in Elche, Spain.
[5] The Utah array was first developed, under his guidance and this technology is currently in use at other centres around the world, where it provides a vital link between the central nervous systems of rats, cats, monkeys and other laboratory animals, and the computers used to study their brain patterns.
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