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He subsequently was awarded Doctorates of Medicine (Oxon, 1970)
and Science (Adelaide, 1976), and was elected to Fellowship of
the Australian Academy of Science and the Royal Australasian College
of Physicians.
Following clinical appointments in the UK, Porter taught and
carried out research in the University Laboratory of Physiology
in Oxford. His research was primarily concerned with neurophysiological
analyses of neuronal mechanisms in the cerebral cortex and subcortical
nuclei in primates which control movement. This interest, of direct
relevance to human neurological disorders, continued as a major
theme of his research at Monash University and later when he established
the Experimental Neurology Unit at the John Curtin School.
After his resignation from the School in 1989, Porter returned
to Monash University as Dean of the Faculty of Medicine until
his retirement in 1997. He was subsequently appointed Planning
Dean of the new Medical School at James Cook University in Townsville,
and is currently Director, Research Development, in the Faculty
of Health Life and Molecular Sciences of that University.
As Director of the John Curtin School, Porter's special interest
in developing measures by which the School and the ANU could most
effectively contribute to enhancing the standard of medical practice
in the ACT led to the introduction in 1985 of clinical teaching
within the Canberra Hospitals of final year medical students from
the University of Queensland. This was a forerunner of the opening
in 1994 of the Canberra Clinical School of the University of Sydney.
Late in 2000, Robert Porter chaired a Committee to advise the
Federal Government on the establishment of a Medical School in
Canberra.
David Curtis
31 January 2001
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