Michael T. Hyson,
Ph.D.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Michael T. Hyson
- BIO -
Born July 5, 1948 in Rockford, Illinois. Michael spent his early
life in Winnebago, Illinois on a small farm. He was greatly inspired
by his father, Eugene [a microbiologist who helped develop yellow
fever vaccine].
His early interests were art, astronomy, space travel and science,
especially biology. Pursuits like falconry, keeping pets, rock climbing,
and spelunking led to keeping pet bats. Because bats and dolphins
both use sonar, he soon found the books of John Lilly.
At age 15, he went to Port Aransas, Texas and trained dolphins with
his brother Robert. Fascinated with these creatures, he set out to
be a marine biologist. In 1964 he studied sharks at Cape Haze Marine
Lab, Sarasota, Florida with Eugenie Clark and the next summer, went
to Alaska to study arctic biology.
In 1966 Hyson entered the University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida
to study biology and medicine. Intent on being a field ethologist,
Hyson studied rodent behaviour with population biologist David van
Vleck, ethology with Art Myrburg [a Konrad Lorenz student], took honors
history with John Knoblock, and continued medical studies by working
as a medical and x-ray technician.
In 1970, he met Thorne Shipley and became fascinated with the study
of the brain and visual perception. He learned that computers could
draw pictures and created the first random-dot stereograms outside
of Bell Labs for Shipley's course. Based on this work, Shipley invited
him to enter graduate school in neurophysiology where he also worked
with William Evoy, a specialist in crayfish locomotion.
After a thesis on stereoscopic vision earned him a masters degree,
he went on to work with Howard Teas, a tropical botanist and remote
sensing expert. He created a computer neural net model of the visual
system intended to automatically map plant species with the [then]
new remote sensing satellites for his Ph. D. While this goal proved
ambitious, the model showed the importance of non-linear processes
in the brain and the usefulness of neural nets for pattern recognition
and robotics. His continued work with Shipley, at the Mailman Center
for Child Development included EEG and evoked response experiments
indicating dyslexia and other problems in children involve errant
processing of signals arriving simultaneously from different senses.
While completing his master's thesis, he met Henry Truby, a linguist
and acoustic phonetician once part of John Lilly's Communication Research
Institute, where attempts were made to teach dolphins to speak English.
Truby and Ric O'Feldman [a trainer for the Flipper TV series] formed
the World Dolphin Foundation and kept the dolphins Florida and Liberty
in the Mashta Island Lagoon, some 1000 yards from Nixon's Key Biscayne
Whitehouse. Hyson joined the group and swam many hours with the dolphins
while developing dolphin communication interfaces and other projects.
After completing his Ph.D. in 1976, and the release of Florida and
Liberty in the Bahamas, he left Florida to join California Institute
of Technology's BioInformation Systems Lab to research non-linear
aspects of brain function with Derek Fender.
At the urging of Bela Julesz, [originator of the random dot stereogram
and, later, the first recipient of the MacArthur Prize] he made precise
records of eye motions during stereoscopic vision and showed the brain
was able to fuse stereo images which were up to 8 degrees apart on
the retinas, proving the brain uses dynamic "software" more
than heretofore appreciated.
About this time, he became concerned about nuclear reactor safety
and designed walking waldos with Dr. James Grote for use in nuclear
reactors. With Cal Tech and Combustion engineering, he jointly proposed
to build robot/waldo walkers [based on how crayfish walk] to the NSF,
DOE, and EPRI.
Looking to the future, he began to dream of living in space and applying
his knowledge of biology and robotics to this goal. After organizing
a Cal Tech Space Settlement Conference in 1978 which was attended
by major players in the space colony movement, he joined a NASA Summer
Study exploring self-reproducing factories on the moon in 1980.
That same summer he joined Gary Hudson's GCH Astronautics [developers
of the first private rocket in the U.S]. While there he developed
telepresence and waldo concepts for space operations and helped develop
a robot arm.
In the fall of 1980, he joined Cal Tech's Jet Propulsion Lab in the
Physics and Containerless Processing section. He helped develop electrostatic
levitators for containerless processing in orbit. The devices were
tested on the NASA KC-135 and he experienced some 10 hours of zero-gravity.
He initiated a project that created uniform plastic microspheres
[the most uniform spheres ever created in the 150-300 micron size
range] and explored their application to AIDS and bone marrow transplants.
He also researched free-flying teleoperators and neuromagnetometry
- a way to detect the magnetic fields of the brain, consulted with
Yamaha on motorcycle safety and robotics, and helped develop some
of the first orange "blue blocking" sunglasses with Suntiger
Biomedical Optics, as well as other projects.
He continued to push for space settlement and low-cost private launchers
as a member of the L-5 Society's Citizen's Advisory Council on Space
Policy. Council reports to President Reagan resulted in the SDI programs.
He helped found the Lunar Society, a group pursuing a private Lunar
settlement.
In 1987, after the Challenger disaster, he left NASA to help make
reliable private orbital rockets.
In 1988, he joined Gary Hudson's Pacific American Launch Systems
as Research Director helping design and build the Liberty 1-A engine
for testing at Edward's AFB. His logistics model showed a lunar settlement
could be built for under a billion dollars (or less) using Hudson's
Single Stage to Orbit (SSTO) Phoenix rocket. The project ended before
the Liberty engine was fired.
Following this, he helped write briefings for the Citizen's Advisory
Council that eventually started major SSTO rocket developments. The
MacDonald-Douglas' DC-X Delta Clipper rocket that resulted was recently
featured on the cover of Popular Science magazine. The DC-X is substantially
the same as Gary Hudson's designs for a mini-Phoenix. On June 7, 1996,
he attended a test launch of the DC-X from White Sands, NM.
With plans for orbit on hold, he decided to pursue his first love,
the dolphins. This was facilitated when he met Paradise Newland, (mother,
dolphin researcher, producer, writer etc) and her son Tiger Stanley
in January, 1990. Inspired by Tiger, initiated by Paradise, the Sirius
Institute became a reality when he became its research director and
the Institute was relocated to Hawai'i to pursue its various projects
with free dolphins.
In April, whilst attending the K.W.I.C. conference in the Keys, he
had the opportunity to reconnect with one of his swimming partners,
Dreamer, at Dolphin's Plus in Florida. She healed an old neck injury
with her sonar. This event so impressed him he determined to solve
the dolphin communication problem, create human/dolphin habitats where
dolphin sound healing and dolphin attended underwater births can be
experienced, and integrate dolphins into human societies. He created
the Song Swimmer musical computer interface that allows dolphins to
play musical instruments and control computers using their sounds.
The Song Swimmer interface was demonstrated at the 3rd International
Dolphin and Whale Conference in Kona, Hawaii in 1991. John Lilly commented
that the work was "excellent and exciting".
A tape "Dolphin Valentine" has been produced. These results
open the way for full, objective communications with the dolphins
as well as artistic endeavors such as interspecies concerts and other
performances where the dolphins compose and perform their own music
in conjunction with human musicians.
A next step for him is to put dolphins on the virtual reality nets
so that anyone, anywhere, can have their own real-time dolphin experiences
and to validate dolphin assisted healing.
Recently, our emphasis has been on establishing a dolphin attended
underwater and natural birth camp here in Hawai’i. A summary
of these concepts is located at: www.planetpuna.com/VOD19
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Curriculum Vitae
Michael T. Hyson, Ph. D.
Sirius Institute
P. O. Box 1979
Pahoa, Hawai’i 96778
808-965-9667
Email: siriusinstitute@yahoo.com or michaelhyson@yahoo.com
Born July 5, 1948, Rockford, Illinois
Knowledge - dolphins, space habitation, robotics, computer vision,
binocular vision, occulomotor system, neural models, visual perception,
animal behavior, ethnobotany, psychoneuroimmunology
Education -
Ph.D. Biology University of Miami Jan. 1976
M.S. Biology University of Miami June 1973
B.S. , Biology University of Miami June 1970
Honors And Awards -
National Research Service Award [California Institute of Technology]
-1977-1980
Maytag Fellow in Biology - 1973-1975
National Science Foundation Traineeship in Biology - 1971-1972
Bausch & Lomb Science Award 1966
First Prize Illinois Science Fair 1961
Memberships -
Sirius Institute [a founder]
World Dolphin Foundation [a founder]
The Lunar Society [a founder]
Citizen's Advisory Council on National Space Policy
Friends of the Red Road [Board Member]
Association for Research in Vision and Optometry
Optical Society of America
Society of Photo-optical Instrumentation Engineers
American Society of Photogrammetry
AAAS
L-5 Society
Lighter-than Air Society
Los Angeles Mycological Society
Center for Shamanic Studies
Military Service -
USNR (Honorable Discharge) 1970 June-December
General -
Ten hours of weightless flight; reading knowledge of German.
Have traveled in continental U.S., Alaska, Hawaii, Bahamas, Belize
and Mexico. I play classical guitar, hike, sail, and scuba dive, and
have fought in armor with broadswords
Summary -
I am interested in diverse topics from space to dolphins. My emphasis
has been on understanding the brain and how it works; developing models
of its operation; understanding other species, and starting space
migration
I have experience in several fields:
Biology -
Neurosciences, visual perception, stereoscopic vision, neural net
models, eye safety, development of UV and blue- blocking sunglasses,
EEG and evoked response studies, SQUID neuromagnetometry, sound analysis,
sonograms, dolphin studies and interspecies communication, ecology
and environmental studies, ecological systems modeling, ethology,
nutrition, life extension, immunology, affinity chromatography, embryology,
microbiology, mycology, bacteriology, hematology, and X-ray, algology,
Have explored -
Alaska, Florida Everglades, reefs in Florida, Belize, Hawaii.
Studied: mice, snakes, crows, falcons, kestrels, prairie falcons,
and various hawk and owls, raccoons, foxes, a margay, kinkajous, squirrels,
praying mantises, caves, bats, and sonar, dolphins, sharks and fish,
skindiving, marine biology.
Aerospace -
Ten hours of weightless flight; rocket engine development; engine
test stand construction; lunar logistics models; Zero-G operations;
containerless processing, electrostatic levitation; production of
uniform microspheres; teleoperation; test stand development; space
transport costing and logistics; public space policy reports; a founder
of the Lunar Society; speaker to L-5 and Cal Tech and UCSB space Club;
advocate of private space industry and settlement.
Remote Sensing -
Aerial photography, photoanalysis, ecological survey, image analysis
by computer; stereo mapping, transects etc.
Computers, Robotics, AI -
Image processing, robot vision, computer graphics, servo control;
have designed waldos, walking machines, automated mowers, man-machine
interfaces, head-aimed televisions; electrostatic levitation using
an Apple II; servo control for a robot arm; emulators for electrostatic
controls; programs measuring droplets; stereogram display and plotting
programs; a computer retinal model, speech analysis & synthesis;
designed a telephone modem network; for studies of evoked brain potentials,
and a multi-company accounting system.
Machines:
Experienced with PC’s, Macintosh, Apple II, IBM PC's, IBM 370,
IBM 1130, IBM 7040; Univac 1106, Univac 1108; PDP 11/20, 11/45, Vax
11 (with Unix)
Languages:
Super Card, Hyper Card, Pascal, Modula-2, Forth, C, Fortran, Basic
and in Assemblers: Apple 6502 ; PDP 11/20 and PDP11/45.
Entertainment -
Consultant to WED on EPCOT space colony display. Technical review
of Star Trek II & III Scripts, developed 3 story outlines for
Trek IV. Numerous lectures on space to Adventurers' Club and other
conferences. Combat improvisations, skits, costume and crowd control
at Renaissance Faire, broadsword fighting; knowledge of swords, armor,
history.
PUBLICATIONS
Latest publication: Sirius Institute Projects Summary at: www.planetpuna.com/VOD19
Webmaster www.planetpuna.com< (see various documents there)
Hyson, M. T., Dolphin Restoration Experiments, Sirius Institute,
1996
Hyson, M. T., et al., Red Road Status Report, Friends of the Red
Road, 1995
Hyson, M. T., Dolphin/People Interaction Systems, Sirius Institute,
1994
Hyson, M. T., Dolphin Telephone Call, Sirius Institute, 1993
Hyson, M. T. The Song Swimmer Musical Communication Interface and
Dolphin Music - Presented at the 3rd International Dolphin and Whale
Conference, Kona Surf Hotel, Wk of Feb. 14, 1992.
Hyson, M. T., Joy Stanley, Charles Lucy Voice of the Dolphin Newsletters
Joy Stanley and M. T. Hyson - Sirius Institute Proposals
Hyson, M. T., SARV - LTA Blimp/Airplane design, for George Huthsteiner,
Los Angeles
Hyson, M. T. , Dyslexia and the Cerebellum for Stillman Dyslexia
Center, Tarzana, CA
Hyson, M. T. Eye Reflectance Study for Spectra Physics and Till Liepman
Hyson, M. T., Hy Tech Window - Newsletter
Hudson, G. C., and Hyson, M. T., (1988) A Single Stage to Orbit Vertical
Take-Off and Vertical Landing (SSTO-VTOVL) Space Transport for Lunar
Settlement and Resupply, In: Symposium on Lunar Bases and Space Activities
of the 21st Century April; 5-7 1988, Lunar & Planetary Institute
3301 NASA Rd. 1, Houston Texas.
Hyson, M. T. and Grote, J. R., (1988) Grasping Robotics, Baen Books,
New York (in prep.)
Rhim, W. K., Hyson, M. T. et al. (1987) Containerless Polymeric Microsphere
Production for Biomedical Applications, Mat. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc.
87:225-230.
Rhim, W. K., Chung, S. K., Hyson, M. T., Elleman, D. D. (1987) Charged
Drop Levitators and Their Applications, Mat. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc.
87:103-112.
Hyson, M. T., Trimpi, A. et al. (1987) A Feasibility Study for an
Automated Autonomous Lawn Maintenance Vehicle, Hy Tech, Glendale Ca.
[for Yamaha Motors Corp.]
Fender, D. H. and Hyson, M. T. (1987) A Proposal for Automated Walking
Battlefield Robots, Hy Tech (submitted to Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency)
Pournelle, J. E., Ransom, J. et al. (M.T. Hyson Associate Editor)
(1986) America - A Spacefaring Nation?, A Report to the President
of the Citizen's Advisory Council on National Space Policy, L-5 Society
Press, Tucson, Arizona.
Rhim, W. K., Chung, S. K., Hyson, M. T., Elleman, D.D. (1986) Large
Charged Drop Levitation Against Gravity, Conf. Rec. IEEE Industry
Applications Soc. Annual Meeting.
Rhim, W. K., Collender M., Hyson, M. T., Simms, W.T. and Elleman,
D. D., (1985) Development of an Electrostatic Positioner for Space
Material Processing, Rev. Sci. Instruments 56:306-317.
Hyson, M. T., Julesz, B. and Fender, D. H. (1985) Eye Movements and
Neural Remapping During Binocular Fusion, In: Adaptive Processes in
Visual and Occulomotor Systems (E. L. Keller and D. S. Sea, Ed's)
Pergammon Press, New York.
Hyson, M. T. and Jaffe, L. D., (1984) Teleoperation, Robotics and
Man - an Overview, In:Teleoperator Maneuvering Technology Requirements
and Assessment for Proximity Operations (P. A. Penzo and S. J. Boulton,
Ed.s) Jet Propulsion Laboratory Report No. D-1419, June, 1984.
Hyson, M. T., (1983) Assured Survival, Invited paper in: Space and
Assured Survival, J. E. Pournelle (Chairman) A Report to the President
of the Citizen's Advisory Council on National Space Policy, Sep. 28,
1983.
Hyson, M. T. (1983) An Automated "Smart" Shock Absorber,
Hy Tech, Glendale, Ca. [for Yamaha Motors Corp.]
Hyson, M. T., Julesz, B. and Fender, D. H. (1983) Eye Movements and
Neural Remapping During Fusion of Misaligned Random Dot Stereograms,
J. Opt. Soc. Am. 73:1665-1673.
Hyson, M. T. (1982) Report on the State of Robotics, Hy Tech, Glendale,
Ca. [for Yamaha Motors Corp.]
Hyson, M. T. (1982), A Study of Motorcycle Conspicuity Using Ethological
Principles,
Hy Tech, Glendale, Ca. [for Yamaha Motors Corp.]
Hyson, M. T. (Editor) (1981) The Caltech Space Settlement Conference,
proceedings of a conference held July 1978 at California Institute
of Technology, published by Hy Tech, Glendale, Ca.
Hyson. M. T., (1979) Sunlight Reflections from Solar Power Satellites
or Solares Mirrors Should Not Harm the Eyes, In: Proc. of AIAA Conference
'Remember the Future' (Stan Kent, Ed.) held July 20-21 1979, San Francisco.
Hyson, M. T. (1976) A Model of the Visual System for Tree Species
Recognition, Dissertation, U. of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida.
Shipley, T. and Hyson, M. T. (1977) Amplitude Decrements in Brain
Potentials in Man Evoked by Repetitive Auditory, Visual and Intersensory
Stimulation, Sensory Processes 1:338-353
Hyson, M. T. (1973) The Perception of Random Dot Stereograms, Thesis,
U. of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida.
PATENTS
Harmonic Color Code Systems (Sound -to- Vision Mapping Systems) [1992]
Myron Blazak, Michael T. Hyson, Charles Lucy
Process for the Mass Production of Polymeric Microspheres by Drop
Spraying, Freezing, Gamma Irradiation and Slow Thawing (1986) W. K.
Rhim, M. T. Hyson, S. K. Chung, M. Colvin and M. Chang, Case No. 17023
(U. S. Patent in Progress)
Containerless Synthesis of Polymeric Microspheres (1984) A. Rembaum,
W. K. Rhim, M. T. Hyson and M. Chang, JPL Case No. 16551.
WORK EXPERIENCE
Current Positions:
Research Director, Sirius Institute
Consultant to Na P’oe Ho'a Aina
Member, Citizens' Advisory Council on National Space Policy
President, Hy Tech Hawai'I
Past Positions:
May to September 1989 - Associate Editor, Brain/Mind Bulletin
March 1988 to March 1989 - Research Director
Pacific American Launch Systems
115 Constitution Drive
Menlo Park, CA 94025
Developed logistics and cost models for settlement of the moon using
the Phoenix SSTO vehicle. Developed and implemented ablator molding
techniques for the Liberty 1-A engine. Performed general information
gathering in many areas. Represented the company through presentations
at conferences. Prepared for engine test and hot firings at Edwards
AFB.
[August 1980 to present]
President , Hy Tech
1155 N Verdugo Rd. Suite C
Glendale, CA
Consultant to:
J. E. Pournelle and Associates, Studio City, CA [space policy, computers]
PanaWorld, Irvine, CA, [technology developments]
Suntiger Biomedical Optics, N. Hollywood, CA, [vision safety and
perception]
Black Bear Electronics, Sylmar, CA [laser printer survey]
Lama Engineering, Pasadena, CA [brain wave analysis]
I-Kron, Santa Barbara, CA [water desalinization]
Yamaha Motors Corp. [robotic and motorcycle safety]
Venture Technology [Sunglass technology and various topics]
Internal Hy Tech Projects:
The Hy Tech Window - A Newsletter
Psychoneuroimmunology and sound
Immunomodulation by plants
September 1980 to August 1987
Design Engineer at JPL
Hy Tech contract to Jet Propulsion Labs:
Microspheres : Developed containerless uniform microsphere production
for affinity chromatography
Electrostatic levitation : helped develop a contactless positioning
system. Work included programming the electrostatic servo systems;
electrostatic field and force models; design and construction of KC-135
flight hardware for weightless testing; specification and purchase
of computer hardware; image analysis software for analysis of drop
shape; and research on various topics.
We demonstrated levitation in the vertical axis in one-G of a 0.1
gram ball 1.0 cm in diameter using a CCD camera to detect the ball
position and an Apple computer to control plate voltages through a
D/A. We have developed a servo using a tetrahedral array of electrodes.
It has successfully levitated a density 3 sample in zero-G conditions.
We have also levitated liquid water drops and water/air compound drops.
Weightless Flight : I have flown ~1000 weightless parabolas in the
KC135 to test the positioning system in zero-G. This amounts to 10
hours of weightlessness.
Teleoperators : Worked on a study of free flying teleoperators for
use from the Shuttle and from a Space Station. I have been reviewing
teleoperator history and the state of vision, touch and other sensors
and manipulation techniques for use in the Teleoperator Maneuvering
System (TMS). I am especially interested in telepresence and head-aimed
displays.
Neuromagnetometry : Developed proposals for a multi-sensor SQUID
to detect brain waves, Performed test measurements of EEG and evoked
responses using a SQUID neuromagnetometer.
Hy Tech Consultations:
Eye Safety Consultant to Suntiger Biomedical Optics and Venture Technology
to design a new form of sunglass filter that protects the eye from
UV and blue light while maximizing transmitted useful light. (Patent
applied for);
Motorcycle Safety/ Robotics Consultant toYamaha Motors Corporation
on motorcycle conspicuity, and robotics and robot vision, automated
vehicles and other topics; G.C.H. Astronautics on computer aided design
and manufacture, robotics, and rocket guidance and control.
June 1980-March 1988 Consultant
Robotics : Consultant to G. C. H., Sunnyvale, Ca.
Developed servo software and shaft encoder software and helped to
design a small robot arm controlled by the Apple computer. If produced,
it would sell for some $4000-6000 less computer and lift up to 10
kg.
Nuclear Reactor Walkers : We also developed proposals for a walking
teleoperator with arms, legs and a head aimed television display for
Combustion Engineering, DOE, NSF, and EPRI. for nuclear reactor safety.
June-August 1980 NASA Fellow
University of Santa Clara, Santa Clara, California
Robotics/ Space Settlement: I was one of 20 participants in a NASA
summer study to explore the feasibility of robotics and automation
in space. I worked on concepts of remote sensing, extraterrestrial
material use, self reproducing machines, teleoperation and life support
in a space station. See:
http://www.islandone.org/MMSG/aasm/
June 1977-June 1980 Research Associate
Bioinformation Systems, 286-80 Caltech, Pasadena, California 91125
(with Derek Fender)
Vision Research: Responsible for research projects on eye movements
during binocular vision and reading. Measured the tolerance of the
brain to vergence error in the fusion of random dot stereograms; measured
motion detection thresholds during stabilized vision.
June 1976-June 1977 Consultant
Kent Watkins and Associates, 444 Brickell Ave., Miami, Florida.
Modem Systems: Prepared specifications and ordered communications
equipment to connect several minicomputer systems via phone as part
of a HUD demonstration program to improve public housing authority
accounting procedures.
Feb.-Mar. 1976 Data Analyst
Biostatistics: Dr. Frank Briese, Biostatistics Dept., U. of Miami,
Miami, Fl.
Processed Florida Visitor's Health Care Study data using SPSS Statistical
Package.
1973-1976 Research Assistant
Dr. Howard J. Teas, Mangrove Research Lab., Dept. of Biology,
U. of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida 33124
Image Analysis, Neural Modeling, Ecological Survey: Developed image
processing software for the analysis of texture patterns for the classification
of vegetation in aerial photos. Experience in aerial photography and
interpretation, ecological survey, developed a camera mount that allowed
35mm stereo photography from a Cessna 172 aircraft.
1973-1975 Research Assistant
Dr. Thorne Shipley
Intersensory Lab., Mailman Center for Child Development, Miami, Florida
Evoked Response Studies: Studied averaged evoked brain potentials
in response to light, sound, and touch. Aided in development of "burst"
stimulus techniques, data analysis, equipment design and maintenance,
experiment design and execution for testing infant sensory functions.
June-Dec. 1973 Programmer
William Forsyth, Jr., Automated Services Co., Miami, Florida
Developed multi-company accounting software in Fortran on IBM 1130
1971-1974 Scientific Liaison and Consultant
Dr. H. M. Truby
World Dolphin Foundation and Language and Linguistics
Research Lab. 7050 Sunset Drive, So. Miami, Fl.
Dolphin Research: A founder of the World Dolphin Foundation. Sonogram
analysis, phonetic transcription, frequency filtration of humans and
dolphins, observed and worked with dolphins and interspecies communication.
1970-1973 Research Assistant
Dr. Thorne Shipley, Perception Laboratory, Bascom Palmer Eye Institute,
Miami, Florida.
Vision Research: Measured the width of Mach Bands, analyzed stereo
acuity data, developed computer programs to generate random dot stereograms,
measured stereo detection latencies as a function of target areas
and degree of rivalry.
Summer 1969 Bacteriological Technician
Veterans Administration Hospital, Miami, Florida
Cultured and identified bacterial species as part of a training program.
Summer 1968 Medical Technician
Veterans Administration Hospital, Miami, Florida
Experience with histological sectioning and staining, urinalysis,
CBC's and blood drawing, and radiology including angiography, pneumoencephalograms
and chest, back and skull X-rays.
1967-1968 Research Assistant
Dr. David Van Vleck, Dept. of Biology, U. of Miami, Coral Gables,
Florida
Ethology and Population Studies: Worked on electromyography of rat
uterus to determine how IUD's work. Studied the social behavior of
two species of rodents sharing the same range with stop-action video
tapes.
Summer 1965 NSF Trainee
NSF Summer Science Training Program in Arctic Biology,
U. of Alaska, College, Alaska
Arctic Biology: Travelled through much of Alaska, as far as the Arctic
Circle. Studied behavioral and physiological adaptations of animals
and plants to arctic conditions. Measured the primary productivity
of Smith Lake with Dr. John Barsdate.
Summer 1964 NSF Trainee
NSF Summer Science Training Program in Marine Biology,
Cape Haze Marine Lab., Sarasota, Florida
Marine Biology: Studied physiology and behavior of marine organisms,
operant conditioning for study of sensory capabilities of sharks,
with Drs. Eugenie Clark and Harold Humm. Made a time-lapse film of
the embryological development of a hermaphroditic fish, Serranus subligaris.
HyTech
P.O. Box 1979
Pahoa, Hawai’I 96778
AVAILABLE FOR CONSULTATIONS
CONTACT:
MichaelHyson@yahoo.com
www.planetpuna.com
808-965-9667
© 2004 HyTech
All rights reserved to the sources.
Legacy for Life -HyTech
*PlanetPuna*
Some major publications:
JPL Electrostatic Levitator
For Zero-G Materials Processing
CalTech Space Settlement Conference
Michael Hyson (Editor)
Neural Remapping Paper
(Work at Cal Tech)
PROFILE
Michael T. Hyson, Ph.D.
Research Director / Co-Founder
Sirius Institute
P. O. Box 1979
Pahoa, Hawai’i 96778
808-965-9667
Email:siriusinstitute@yahoo.com or michaelhyson@yahoo.com
Webmaster for:www.planetpuna.com and
Sirius Institute (website at: www.planetpuna.com/sirius)
Current Project Summary for the Sirius Institute may be found at:
www.planetpuna.com/VOD19
Founder / President - HyTech
© 2 0 0 0 by *PlanetPuna*, Sirius Institute & Sirius Connection
420
*All Rights Reserved to the Sources*
Updated Jan, 2006