Simon Baron-Cohen
is Professor of Developmental Psychopathology at the University of Cambridge
and Fellow at Trinity College, Cambridge. He is Director of the Autism Research
Centre (ARC) in Cambridge. He holds degrees in Human Sciences from New College,
Oxford, a PhD in Psychology from UCL, and an M.Phil in Clinical Psychology at
the Institute of Psychiatry. He held lectureships in both of these departments
in London before moving to Cambridge in 1994. He is also Director of CLASS (Cambridge
Lifespan Asperger Syndrome Service), a clinic for adults with suspected AS.
He is author of Mindblindness
(MIT Press, 1995), The Essential Difference: Men, Women and the Extreme
Male Brain (Penguin UK/Basic Books, 2003), and Prenatal Testosterone in
Mind (MIT Press, 2005). He has edited a number of scholarly anthologies,
including Understanding Other Minds (OUP, 1993, 2001), The Maladapted
Mind (Erlbaum, 1997) and Synaesthesia (Blackwells, 1997).
He has also
written books for parents and teachers such as Autism: The Facts (OUP,
1993), Tourette Syndrome: The Facts (OUP, 1998), and Teaching
children with autism to mind read (Wiley, 1998). He is author of the
DVD-ROM Mind Reading: an interactive guide to emotions (Jessica Kingsley
Ltd, 2003) that was nominated for a BAFTA award for Best Off-Line Learning.
He has been awarded prizes
from the American Psychological Association, the British Association for the
Advancement of Science (BA), and the British Psychological Society (BPS) for
his research into autism. For 2007 he is President of the Psychology Section of
the BA, Vice President of the National Autistic Society, and received the 2006
Presidents' Award for Distinguished Contributions to Psychological Knowledge
from the BPS. His current research is testing the 'extreme male brain' theory
of autism at the neural, endocrine and genetic levels.
Simon Baron-Cohen is an Editor-in-Chief of the online open access
journal Molecular Autism.