Prof. John G. Hildebrand was elected as an AAS Fellow in 2023. As a fellow, Prof. John G. Hildebrand contributes to the development of the Academy's strategic direction through participation in AAS activities and governance structures. This gears the Academy's vision of transforming African lives through science.
Country
United States
Year Elected
2023
Discipline
Professor Emeritus Univesrity of Arizona
Country
United States
Year Elected
2023
Discipline
Professor Emeritus Univesrity of Arizona
John G. Hildebrand is Regents Professor Emeritus of Neuroscience at the University of Arizona in Tucson. He
currently (2014-2026) serves as the elected International Secretary of the National Academy of Sciences. His
research fields are insect neurobiology and behavior, olfactory neuroscience, chemical ecology, and the biology of
arthropod vectors of pathogens. Born and raised in Boston, Massachusetts, he earned his baccalaureate degree
(Biology) at Harvard University and Ph.D. (Biochemistry) at the Rockefeller University. After 16 years of faculty
service at Harvard and Columbia Universities, he moved to Arizona in 1985 as founding head (1985-2013) of the
Division of Neurobiology, which became the Department of Neuroscience in the College of Science in 2009.
Among his interests and areas of active engagement are science policy and diplomacy, K-16 education, and
diversity, equity, access, and inclusion in STEMM. A past president of the Association for Chemoreception
Sciences, International Society of Chemical Ecology, and International Society for Neuroethology, he is a member
or fellow of the African Academy of Sciences, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Philosophical
Society, Brazilian Academy of Sciences, German National Academy of Sciences 'Leopoldina’, National Academy
of Sciences (USA), Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters,
and The World Academy of Sciences; Honorary Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society (UK); and Fellow of
the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the Entomological Society of America, the
International Society for Neuroethology, and the International Science Council