Graeme Milbourne Clark AC (born 16 August 1935) is an Australian doctor. He was a key figure in the research and development of the Bionic Ear — a multiple-channel Cochlear Implant.
Clark was born in Camden, New South Wales on August 16, 1935. As a young boy, Clark’s father became deaf and this inspired his lifelong mission to help deaf people.
Education
Clark attended Camden Primary School and then Sydney Boys High for one year. The remainder of his secondary education was in Royle House at Scots College in Sydney. He then went on to study medicine at the University of Sydney, graduating in 1957 with a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) with honours and was top of his year. He continued his studies in 1962, in general surgery at the Royal College of Surgeons in Edinburgh.
He then he specialised in ear nose and throat surgery at the Royal National Throat Nose and Ear Hospital and obtained a fellowship in 1964 from the Royal College of Surgeons, London. Clark then returned to Australia and became a Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons and in 1969 completed his PhD at the University of Sydney on “Middle Ear & Neural Mechanisms in Hearing and in the Management of Deafness”. At the same time, he completed a Master of Surgery thesis on “The Principles of the Structural Support of the Nose and its Application to Nasal and Septal Surgery’.
In 1976 he returned to England to study at the University of Keele, and to learn more about speech science, as this knowledge was also essential for enabling him to work on converting complicated speech signals into electrical stimuli of the hearing nerve.
Motivated not only by his father’s deafness but inspired by the life works of Louis Pasteur, Clark considered the notion that hearing, particularly for speech, might be reproduced in people with deafness if the damaged or underdeveloped ear were bypassed and the auditory nerve electrically stimulated, to reproduce the coding of sound.His initial doctoral research at the University of Sydney investigated the effect of the rate of electrical simulation on single cells and groups of cells in the auditory brainstem response, the centre where frequency discrimination is first decoded. His study showed the limitation of reproducing speech frequencies using a temporal code. At the completion of his PhD in 1969 he considered that more work was required to decide which signals were of greatest importance in speech perception.
Clark’s research demonstrated that an electrode bundle with 'graded stiffness' would pass without injury around the tightening spiral of the cochlea to the speech frequency region. Until this time he had difficulty identifying a way to place the electrode bundle in the cochlea without causing any damage. A breakthrough was achieved during a vacation at the beach — using a seashell to replicate the human cochlea and grass blades (which were flexible at the tip and gradually increasing in stiffness) to represent electrodes.
Further modifications to his model were made. Clark showed that the electrode bundle had to be free-fitting and the wires terminated with circumferential bands to reduce friction against the outer wall of the cochlea, and so make it easier to pass the required distance. The bands had to be wide enough to minimize the charge density of the electrical current for safety, but narrow enough for localized stimulation of the nerve fibers for the place coding of frequency. In order to satisfy questions about the safety of the device Clark conducted experiments to show that there was a minimal risk of meningitis from a middle ear infection if a fibrous tissue sheath grew around the electrode bundle. The sheath was developed from a connective tissue graft from the person’s own body that was placed around the electrode bundle where it entered the cochlea. The ultimate question however was: could speech be coded with multi-channel stimulation so that it could be understood by a deaf person? and this could only be discovered by operating on a deaf person. When he first started making the Bionic Ear, no one believed that he could do it as the ear was so delicate to operate on.
The First Implant - 1978
The first multi-channel cochlear implant operation was done at the Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital in 1978 by Clark and Dr Brian Pyman. The first person to receive the implant was Rod Saunders who had lost his hearing aged 46.
Breakthrough
After successfully completing the surgery Clark in 1978 discovered with his post-doctoral colleague Yit Chow Tong how multi-channel electrical stimulation of the brain could reproduce frequency and intensity as pitch and loudness in severely-to-profoundly deaf adults who originally had hearing before going deaf. Electrical stimulation at low rates of 50 pulses/s was perceived as a pitch of the same frequency, but at rates above 200 pulses/s what was heard was poorly discriminated and a much higher pitch. This discovery established that the timing of electrical stimuli was important for low pitch when this had been difficult to determine with sound. But discrimination of pitch up to 4000 Hertz is required for speech understanding, so Clark emphasized early in the development of the cochlear implant that place coding through multi-channel stimulation would have to be used for the important mid-to-high speech frequencies.Clark and Tong next discovered that place of stimulation, was experienced as timbre, but without a strong pitch sensation. The patient could identify separate sensations according to the site of stimulation in the cochlea. Furthermore, if the pitch-like sensations from rate and place of stimulation were combined one could influence the other. Thus a lower rate of stimulation on a higher pitched electrode with sharp timbre corresponded to a higher rate on a lower pitched electrode with dull timbre.He next made the very important discovery in 1978 that when individual electrodes were stimulated the sensations not only varied from sharp to dull, but were recognized as vowel-like. The vowels corresponded to those that had second formant frequencies that would excite the same region in a normal hearing person. Formants are concentrations of frequency energy due to vocal tract resonances, and they are important for intelligibility of speech. If pairs of electrodes were stimulated together at a constant stimulus rate the vowel perceived was different from that perceived with single electrode stimuli. When two electrodes were stimulated at different rates a consonant was perceived. The consonant was related to the difference in rate between the stimuli on the electrodes.
Clark and Tong at the end of 1978 then made the ground-breaking discovery - the first speech processing strategy to give open-set speech understanding to severely-to-profoundly deaf people using electrical stimulation alone, and in combination with lipreading. The speech processing strategy coded the second formant as place of stimulation along the cochlear array, the amplitude of the second formant as current level, and the voicing frequency as pulse rate across the formant channels.
Clark in December 1978 arranged that his audiologist present open-set words to his first patient, who was able to identify several correctly. Clark realized then that this was the breakthrough in providing speech understanding that everyone had been hoping for. To quote from Clark’s autobiography (Sounds from Silence Allen & Unwin, 2000) “it was the moment I had been waiting for. I went into the adjoining room and cried for joy.”
This discovery was established by Clark with objective audiological tests in 1979. The open-set speech test results on this patient were the first time that speech recognition for electrical stimulation alone had been demonstrated, under standardized conditions. Previously single-channel strategies had only shown a small improvement when electrical stimulation was used as a lip reading aid, but no speech understanding for electrical stimulation alone.
As a result Clark went on to operate on a second patient who had been deaf for 17 years. He was able to show that the speech coding strategy was not unique to one person’s brain response patterns, and that the memory for speech sounds could persist for many years after the person became deaf.
Industrial Development -1979
Clark recognized the importance of the research being developed industrially to benefit many people, and he played a key role in facilitating the negotiations with the pacemaker firm Telectronics. The Australian government underwrote its industrial development. By August 1981 the company was listed on the Australian stock market as Nucleus Limited, which subsequently floated the subsidiary Cochlear Pty Ltd. This company was responsible for conducting the commercial development, and did so through a close relationship with the research led by Clark.
The successful development of the cochlear implant was confirmed when it gained approval from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the United States. In 1982 Clark supervised the initial clinical studies mandated by the agency, and in 1985 after a world trial the FDA granted approval for the cochlear implant for adults 18 and over who had hearing before going deaf. It thus became the first multi-channel cochlear system to be approved as safe and effective by the FDA or any health regulatory body for giving speech understanding both with lip reading and for electrical stimulation alone in people who had hearing before going deaf.
Clark led the research to discover how speech was coded by the brain through electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve, and how he could improve the strategy so that most deaf people could achieve near perfect speech perception.Clark and Tong discovered that the frequency glides of importance for coding the plosive sounds in speech e.g. /b/, /d/, /g/, are best coded by changes in place of stimulation rather than rate of stimulation, over the short durations required for these consonants. They discovered that rate of stimulation was perceived as voicing in the appropriate speech context, and voicing was recognized for rate of stimulation across the spatial frequency channels. They discovered that electrical stimulation of two electrodes could be perceived with two components, but were fused into one speech percept. This indicated that a speech processor that presented two or more formants or frequency bands, instead of one, should provide better speech perception. This was shown to be the case by Clark and team. As a result of these and later related discoveries by Clark and team a majority of severely-to-profoundly deaf people who have had hearing before going deaf can achieve approximately 60% speech understanding without help from lipreading, and nearly 100% understanding with the aid of lipreading. Clark also discovered that his formant extraction scheme provided excellent speech understanding for an adult using a tonal language e.g. Mandarin. However, hearing speech in noise can be difficult and the sounds of music are not ideal. Research is needed to improve these outcomes.
Research into speech perception in deaf children
In 1985, Clark as the surgeon-in-charge performed the cochlear implant surgery on the first children along with Drs Pyman and Webb. The first child was 10 years old and the second was 5 years old.From 1985 to 1990 Clark and the members of his Cochlear Implant Clinic at the Eye and Ear Hospital in Melbourne, followed by other clinics world wide, found that the formant extraction speech coding strategies developed by Clark and team resulted in up to 60% of children being able to understand significant numbers of words and sentences with electrical stimulation alone without help from lipreading. With a strategy that also extracted a band of high frequencies there were increased numbers of children with improved speech perception, speech production and language scores.
In 1990 the FDA announced that the 22-channel cochlear implant was safe and effective in enabling deaf children from ages two through 17 years to understand speech both with and without lipreading. It was the first cochlear implant to be approved by any world regulatory body for deaf children. It is thus the first major advance helping severely-to-profoundly deaf children to communicate in the last 200 years since Sign Language of the Deaf was developed by l’Abeé de l’Épée at the Paris Deaf School and Speech Reading by Heineke in Germany.
Further research led by Clark’s team showed there was a trend for better speech perception the younger the child. For this reason, Clark undertook additional biological safety research to ensure that there was no adverse effect from head growth, and that pneumococcal middle ear infection could be prevented from spreading to the cochlea to help avoid the risk of meningitis. It was only after the safety studies were complete, and showed minimal risk that Clark carried out operations on young children.
Clark with Dowell and colleagues then found that children operated on under four years of age have phoneme, word and sentence recognition scores that are similar to those for deaf adults who had hearing before going deaf. At the same time Clark and Busby discovered that more basic perception skills that included the ability to discriminate electrode place of stimulation were worse if there was a long period of hearing loss, or the child was implanted at an older age. The research also suggested that exposure to sound or electrical stimulation during the “plastic” phase of brain development is required for this perceptual skill to develop, and this is important for good speech perception.
In addition, it was shown that the ability of children to rank the pitch of electrodes with the electrode place of stimulation (rather than discriminate electrode place) is an important requirement for speech perception. But not all children who could rank electrode pitch had good speech perception suggesting the development of neural connectivity for place discrimination or pitch ranking is not the only factor for learning speech. Other factors could be temporal processing or the development of language.
The Benefits of Binaural Hearing with an Implant in Each Ear or an Implant in One Ear and a Hearing Aid in the Other -1995.
Once Clark established the benefit of a cochlear implant in one ear he commenced research to determine the value of bilateral implants, and an implant in one ear and a hearing aid in the other. His aim was to reproduce the benefits of two ears. These benefits are: a) the ability to localize the direction of a sound (due to differences in the intensity as well as the time of arrival and phase of the sound at each ear); b) hearing speech in noise in each ear due to central neural mechanisms that partially remove the noise, but not the signal (squelch effect or binaural release from masking), c) hearing speech on one side with competing noise in the opposite ear (the head shadow effect) d) loudness summation.He first undertook psychophysical studies with colleague van Hoesel in 1995. They showed that interaural intensity differences could be readily detected to give good sound localization, but differences in the interaural time of stimulation were more poorly detected. When sound localization was tested with a series of free-field speakers the average detection was 15.50 compared to 10-20 for normal hearing. When the cues were isolated, the interaural temporal differences for electrical stimulation were similar for sound at 50 pulses/s (150 ?s), but not at higher rates. The average interaural intensity difference perceived was 0.3 decibels(dB) for electrical stimulation, and this was approximately three times that for normal hearing.
To investigate the head shadow as well as the “squelch” effect, it was necessary to present the noise separated in space from speech. The head acts as an acoustic barrier that attenuates the signal on the far side of the head compared to the near side. The effect is greater for high frequencies, and is approximately 7 dB in the speech frequency range. Firstly, the signal-to-noise ratio was determined for the reception of speech with the speech and noise presented from directly in front. The noise source was then separated and moved to say the left ear and the signal-to-noise ratio adjusted for speech reception. It would then be expected that on the left side the noise would have to be reduced when testing the left ear to achieve the same speech reception threshold. When testing the right side, the speech signal intensity could be reduced to achieve the same speech reception threshold. In the binaural case it could be reduced even further suggesting that not only was there a head shadow effect, but a “squelch” effect. When the data on four subjects were analyzed there was a very significant head shadow effect of 4-5 dB. A “squelch” effect was marginally significant at 1-2 dB.
The University of Melbourne’s Department of Otolaryngology & the Bionic Ear Institutemoreless
In 1970 Clark was appointed as the Foundation Professor of Otolaryngology (Ear, Nose, and Throat Surgery) at the University of Melbourne, and then in 2000 he was made one of the first Laureate Professors at the University for his international recognition of scientific achievement. He held this position till he retired in 2004. He led most of the pioneering cochlear implant research while Head of the Department of Otolaryngology. His research was funded initially by an appeal through a Telethon, and then a Public Interest Grant from the Australian government. His ongoing research to understand the functioning and improve the cochlear implant was through his grants from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, the Australian Research Council, The US National Institutes of Health, and The Cooperative Research Centre program. He was also able to coordinate the basic with clinical studies as the head of cochlear implant clinic at the Eye and Ear Hospital (the first public hospital based cochlear implant clinic in the world).In 1983 the Bionic Ear Institute was founded by Clark, as an independent, non-profit, medical research organization. The goal of the Bionic Ear Institute was: “to give deaf children and adults the opportunity to participate as fully as possible in the hearing world and to find new ways to restore brain function”. It has been an important means of supporting Clark’s efforts to provide effective hearing for most deaf people through the bionic ear (multi-channel cochlear implant.
After 34 years as the Foundational Professor of Ear, Nose and Throat Surgery at the University of Melbourne, and 20 years as the Founding Director of the Bionic Ear Institute Clark retired from these positions. He was then appointed as the first Distinguished Professor at La Trobe University in Melbourne, and is involved in the development of the Graeme Clark Centre for Bionic Ear and Neurosensory Research. The centre is within the School of Psychological Science, and is coordinating research in neurophysiology, electrochemistry, materials science, psychology of speech and language, and signal processing. Its aim is to facilitate cross-disciplinary fundamental research, and its application to the development of treatments for hearing loss and other neurosensory disorders. In particular its aim is to develop bionic ears that provide high fidelity hearing for better perception and music appreciation.
In 2002 The Graeme Clark Cochlear Scholarship Foundation was established in honor of Graeme Clark for his lifelong commitment to finding a solution for people with hearing loss, and his pioneering work in the field of cochlear implant technology. Awarded by Cochlear Limited, scholarships are presented to cochlear implant recipients around the world to help defray the costs of their higher education consisting of financial assistance towards a college degree at an accredited university for up to four years).
In recognition of Clark’s contributions to the welfare of deaf people, The Graeme Clark Charitable Foundation, a charitable foundation has been established to firstly enable individuals with deafness and other sensory disorders develop their true potential through appropriate biomedical, technological and educational measures. These measures include supporting talented scientists to develop their innovative ideas, and so make further advances, such as improved bionic ears (cochlear implants). The foundation will also provide support for disadvantaged people in need to receive a bionic ear or other prosthetic device.The foundation has presently supported a deaf boy in Peru in receiving a cochlear implant; supported a study by Desert Knowledge Australia to help determine how to eradicate ear infection in aboriginal children, financed a new generation of electrodes that could help people with spinal cord injury, and examine the long term effects of the bionic ear on a human temporal bones.
The Graeme Clark Centre for Innovation in the Sciences-2009moreless
The Scots College, a great private school in Sydney, has built a new science building named the Graeme Clark Centre for Innovation in the Sciences. It is a state-of-the-art facility, designed to promote in the hearts and minds of students a love and appreciation of the sciences so they may make a key contribution to Australia’s future. The centre has one floor for mathematics and recognizes the inspiration of math master Fred Pollock, two floors for the physical and biological sciences with the Robert Iles theatre to recognize Dr Iles leadership as principal, and on the ground floor the Dr John Solomon Sports Club to recognize Dr Solomon’s achievements in sport as captain of Australia’s rugby union teams and a leading obstetrician. This science building and complex is named after Graeme Clark as his name will inspire the next generation of scientific endeavor and innovation.
There are many applications arising from cochlear implant research and technology in the future. Research directions include studying the manner in which the cochlear implant may convey sounds of speech more clearly. Another area of study is the benefit of pairing a cochlear implant with a hearing aid in the other ear or another cochlear implant. The success of the bionic ear research has also opened up a new discipline which Clark has termed Medical Bionics. Not only should this research lead to advanced bionic ears for high fidelity sound, but include neural prostheses for the repair of nerve and spinal cord injuries, and the relief of blindness (Bionic eye).
2009 Otto Schmitt award, the International Federation for Medical and Biological Engineering :(this award recognizes a Biomedical Engineer for exceptional contributions to the advancement of the field of medical and biological engineering and is presented every three years at the World Congress on Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering).
2007 Australian Father of the Year Award
2006 Senior Australian of the Year
2005 Aram Glorig Award, International Society of Audiology (in recognition of a lifetime’s contribution to audiology)
2005 Australian Entrepreneur of the Year Award (Southern Region)
2005 Cavalcade of Science Honour Award, Australian Institute of Political Science
2005 National Australia Day Council, Australian Achiever’s Award
2004 Rio Tinto Science Heroes Award, Australian Science Festival for Industry
2004 The Inaugural Volta Award, Cochlear Implant Club International
2004 Clunies Ross National Science & Technology Award,
2002 Fletcher Award in Technical Application, New York League for the Hard of Hearing
2002 Elected a Member of Collegium Oto-Rhino-Laryngologicum Amicitiae Sacrum
2001-2002 Australian Vice-Chancellors’ nominee to represent medical research in Australia at Houston Festival honouring Australia
2000 Royal Australasian College of Surgeons, John Mitchell Crouch Fellowship Award for Surgical Research
1999 BHP Award for the Pursuit of Excellence (Science and Technology)
1999 Bertha Sudholz Prize, Otolaryngology, Adelaide University, Australia
1999 Companion of the Order of Australia (AC)
1997 Officer of the Order of Australia (AO)
1993 Zülch Prize, Max Planck Society, 2007 (the most prestigious scientific distinction in basic neurological research in Germany, for outstanding research in neuroprosthetics)
1992 Ian Wark Medal and Lecture, Australian Academy of Science
1992 International Speech Communication Association Medal
1988 Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh Medal, awarded at the Quincentenary Celebrations of the College
1986 A. Charles Holland Foundation International Prize, awarded at the XVIII World Congress of the International Federation of Otolaryngological Societies, Rome
1986 Excellence in Surgery Award, Royal Australasian College of Surgeons
1985 Prime Minister's Prize for Science
1984 Victoria prize
1983 Sir William Upjohn Medal, The University of Melbourne
1970 James Cook Medal, The Royal Society of New South Wales
Academic
2009 Honorary Member of the Royal Institute of Australia :(one of 17 outstanding Australian Scientists and Communicators as initial Bragg members).
2006 Fellow of the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering (AIMBE), (The highest honour of the AIMBE)
2004 Honorary Fellow, Royal College of Surgeons, England
2004 Fellow of the Royal Society of London
2004 Fellow of the Australian Acoustical Society
2003 Honorary Fellow, The Royal Society of Medicine, London
2002 Honorary Member of the American Otological Society
1998 Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science
1998 Fellow of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering
1993 Honorary Member, Section of Otology, The Royal Society of Medicine, London
1992 First Honorary Fellow, Audiological Society of Australia
Honors — Academic
2009 Honorary Member of the Royal Institute of Australia :(one of 17 outstanding Australian Scientists and Communicators as initial Bragg members).
2008 The first Distinguished Professor, La Trobe University, Melbourne (for internationally acclaimed scientific achievements)
2006 Fellow of the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering (AIMBE), (The highest honour of the AIMBE)
2005 Laureate Professor, Emeritus, The University of Melbourne, Australia (for international recognition of scientific achievement)
2004-2005 Honorary Laureate Professorial Fellow, The University of Melbourne
2004 Honorary Fellow, Royal College of Surgeons, England
2004 Fellow of the Royal Society of London
2004 Fellow of the Australian Acoustical Society
2003-2006 Honorary Visiting Professorial Fellow, The University of Wollongong, Australia
2003 Honorary Fellow, The Royal Society of Medicine, London
2002 Honorary Member of the American Otological Society
2000-2004 Laureate Professor, The University of Melbourne, Australia (for international recognition of scientific achievement)
1998 Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science
1998 Fellow of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering
1993 Honorary Member, Section of Otology, The Royal Society of Medicine, London
1992 First Honorary Fellow, Audiological Society of Australia
Honorary doctorates
2010 Doctorate honoris causa, Zaragoza University, Spain
2008 Doctorate honoris causa, Zaragoza University, Spain
2004 Doctorate of Laws honoris causa (Hon. LLD), Monash University, Australia
2003 Doctorate of Engineering (Hon. DEng), Chung Yuan Christian University, Taiwan
2002 Doctorate of Science honoris causa (Hon. DSc), University of Wollongong, Australia
1989 Doctorate of Medicine honoris causa (Hon. MD), University of Sydney, Australia
1988 Doctorate of Medicine (Hon. MD), Medizinische Hochschule, Hannover, Germany
Personal Named Distinctions
2008 The Graeme Clark Centre for “Innovation in the Sciences” at The Scots College, (a leading secondary school), Sydney
2008 The Graeme Clark Foundation, (The Graeme Clark Foundation was established to help disadvantaged people with sensory disorders develop their true potential. It also aims to give opportunities to talented scientists to develop their research to restore vital senses).
2008 The Inaugural Graeme Clark Research Outcomes Forum. (the Australian Research Council’s Forum highlights the ways in which quality research can translate into important benefits for the community). The Inaugural Keynote address was given by Graeme Clark.
2008 The Graeme Clark Annual Oration, for Australia’s Information and Communications Technology (ICT) Research Centre of Excellence for Life Sciences, The Inaugural Oration was given by Graeme Clark
2003-04 The Graeme Clark Cochlear Implant Workshop for Japanese Surgeons organized by the Cooperative Research Centre for Cochlear Implant and Hearing Aid Innovation
2002 The Graeme Clark Cochlear Scholarship, awarded annually, was established in Australia and the United States to assist people with cochlear implants to undertake tertiary studies.
2002 The Graeme Clark Room, the Ear Foundation, Nottingham, UK
Named Lectures
2009 Libby Harricks Oration, Self Help for Hard of Hearing People, Sydney.
2008 The Graeme Clark Inaugural Oration, for Australia’s Information and Communications Technology (ICT) Research Centre of Excellence for Life Sciences, University of Melbourne.
2008 The Inaugural Keynote Address, Graeme Clark Research Outcomes Forum, Australian Research Council, Parliament House Canberra.
2008 The 51st Anniversary Errol Solomon Meyers Memorial Lecture and Medal, The University of Queensland, Medical School.
2006 Plenary Address The 37th Nobel Mini-symposium: Frontiers in Medicine, Cochlear Implants, from Bench to Bedside
2006 Lambie-Dew Oration, Medical Students Association, University of Sydney.
2005 The Gordon Smyth Lecture, The British Association of Otorhinolaryngologists - Head and Neck Surgeons
2004 45th Chapman Oration, Australian Institute of Engineers
2004 Vernon Collins Memorial Oration — Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne
2003 Eminent Speaker, Australian Commerce and Industry office, Taipei, Taiwan
2003 Halpern Lecture, Department of Chemistry, University of Wollongong
2001 The Graham Fraser Memorial Lecture, The Royal Society of Medicine, London, February, 2001
1999 The 1999 Toynbee Memorial Lecture, The Royal Society of Medicine/Royal College of Surgeons, London, November, 1999
Research & Academic Leadership
1984-2005 Founder and Director, The Bionic Ear Institute, East Melbourne, Australia
1999-2004 Laureate Professor, The University of Melbourne
1970-2004 Foundation Professor of Otolaryngology and Chairman, Department of Otolaryngology, The University of Melbourne, Australia
1970-2004 Head and Founder, Cochlear Implant Program, The University of Melbourne, Australia
1985-2004 Head and Founder of the Cochlear Implant Clinic, Royal Victorian Eye & Ear Hospital, Australia
1971-2003 Chief Investigator on 19 National Health & Medical Research Council of Australia projects
1992-1998 Director, Co-operative Research Centre for Cochlear Implant, Speech and Hearing Research, East Melbourne, Australia
1988-1996 Director, The Australian Research Council’s Special Research Centre the Human Communication Research Centre, East Melbourne, Australia
1984-1994 Chief Investigator of two US National Institutes of Health Grants
1984-1993 Chief Investigator of National Health & Medical Research Council Program Grant: “Studies to Develop Sensory Prostheses for Deaf Children and Adults”
1985-1992 Chief Investigator of two US National Institutes of Health Contracts
1979-1981 Director of two Commonwealth Government Public Interest Grants
General Contributions to Medicine & Science
2004-2005 Member of the Prime Minister’s Science, Engineering and Innovation Council
1982- Member of the Advisory Council for Children with Impaired Hearing
1973-2004 Assessor, National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia
2001-2002 Member of the Australian Research Council’s Expert Advisory Committee in Biology and Biotechnology
1973-1991 Executive Member, Deafness Foundation of Victoria
1980-1982 Vice-Chairman, Advisory Council for Children with Impaired Hearing
1973-1982 Chairman, Medical Sub-Committee, Deafness Foundation of Victoria
1976-1981 Member of Committee on Care of Hearing Impaired Children, International Federation of Otorhinolaryngological Society
1979-1980 Chairman, Victorian Branch, Otolaryngological Society of Australia
1975-1980 Chairman, Consultative Council on Maternal and Child Health, Minister of Health, Victorian Government
1973-1980 Assistant Editor, Journal of Otolaryngological Society of Australia
1971-1976 Chairman, Victorian Committee, Postgraduate Training in Otolaryngology
1975-1975 Honorary Secretary, Australasian Deafness Council
1971-1973 Chairman, Steering Committee to Establish Deafness Foundation of Victoria
Clinical Positions
1985-2004 Surgeon-in-Charge, Cochlear Implant Clinic, The Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital
1966-2004 Senior Honorary ENT Surgeon, The Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital
1971-1975 Consultant Otolaryngologist to Royal Melbourne and Royal Women’s Hospitals, Melbourne
1968-1973 Consultant Otolaryngologist, Commonwealth Acoustic Laboratories of Australia
1966-1971 Senior Visiting ENT Surgeon, Repatriation General Hospital, Melbourne
1967-1968 Lecturer, Department of Physiology, University of Sydney
1964-1966 First Assistant ENT Surgeon, Alfred Hospital, Melbourne
1963-1966 Senior Assistant ENT Surgeon, The Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital, Melbourne
1963 Senior Registrar, Otolaryngology, Bristol General Hospital, Bristol, UK
Tutor in Otolaryngology, Bristol University, Bristol, UK
1962 Senior House Surgeon, Royal National Throat, Nose and Ear Hospital, London, UK
1961 Registrar, Neurosurgery and Otolaryngology, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney
1960 Part-time Lecturer, Department of Anatomy, University of Sydney
1959 Senior Resident Medical Officer, Royal North Shore Hospital, Sydney
1958 Junior Resident Medical Officer, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney
Qualifications
1969 Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Sydney, Australia. Thesis: “Middle ear and neural mechanisms in hearing and in the management of deafness”.
1968 Master of Surgery (MS), University of Sydney, Australia. Thesis: “The principals of the structural support of the nose and their application to nasal and septal surgery”
1966 Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (FRACS) in Otolaryngology
1962 Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, England (FRCS) in Otolaryngology
1961 Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, Edinburgh (FRCS) in General Surgery and Pathology
1957 Bachelor of Medicine (MB) and Bachelor of Surgery (BS), University of Sydney, Australia (Graduated with Honours and First Place in Final Year Examination)
A Selected Bibliography of the Most Important Publicationsmoreless
Books
Clark GM. (2003) Cochlear Implants: Fundamentals and Applications. Springer-Verlag, New York. (The first textbook on the cochlear implant, a major 800 page work written solely by Clark)
Clark GM. (2000) Sounds from Silence. Allen & Unwin, Sydney. (Clark’s Autobiography)
Inventors: G.M. Clark, J. Patrick, I. Forster, Y.C. Tong, R.C. Black. (1977)
Countries & Patent Nos.: Australia - 519,851 (3.11.77); Europe - 78.300567 (France, West Germany, The Netherlands, United Kingdom); Denmark - 78.4902; Japan - 1529582; U.S.A. - 4,267,410; Canada - 1,100,189.
(The first patent of a receiver-stimulator designed to stimulate the auditory nerve and for speech understanding)
Hearing Prosthesis - Speech Processor
Inventors: G.M. Clark, J. Patrick, J. Millar, P.M. Seligman, Y.C. Tong (1979)
Countries & Patent Nos.: Australia - 535,489 (19.12.79); Europe - 80901001.0 (U.K, West Germany, France, Sweden, Italy, The Netherlands); Japan - Application No. 55-501189; U.S.A. - 4,441,202; Canada - 1,165,884.
(The first patent of the second formant/voicing speech processor for speech recognition in profoundly deaf people)
Improvements in Speech Processor, Inventors
G.M. Clark, J. Patrick, J. Millar, P.M. Seligman, Y.C. Tong (1980)
Countries & Patent No.: Australia - 541,248; Canada - 391,699; Denmark - 549,881; Europe - 813,058,377; Japan - 19,874,081; U.S.A. - 4,515,158.
(The first patent for the second and first formant/voicing speech processor)
Improved Sound Processor for Cochlear Implants
DB Grayden, GM Clark (2006) (differential rate speech processor)
Countries & Patent No.: DE 60025735
Emphasis of Short Duration Transient Speech Features, Inventors
A Vandali and GM Clark (Transient Emphasis speech processor)