Stefano Sandrone

Stefano Sandrone (1988) is an Italian neuroscientist, an educationalist and a principal teaching fellow at Imperial College London.

Stefano Sandrone was born in Canelli, Italy, on 1 February 1988, and obtained a Ph.D. in Neuroscience at King's College London, United Kingdom, where he started his career as a teaching fellow.

Moreover, in the same year he was elected as the youngest Chair within the American Academy of Neurology,[14] and in July he was awarded the Julia Higgins Award from Imperial College London for 'his significant contribution to the support of academic women at the College'.

[21] In 2022 he authored The birth of modern neuroscience in Turin,[22] favourably reviewed by Lancet Neurology, and won the Trainees in the Association for the Study of Medical Education (TASME) Mentorship Prize.

Sandrone's works also include the rediscovery of the manuscript of the first functional neuroimaging experiment,[25] which has been featured in several magazines and newspapers,[26][27][28][29][30][31][32] and the narration of the '(delayed) history of the brain lymphatic system' in Nature Medicine.