Andrew Huberman

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Andrew Huberman
Andrew D. Huberman, Ph.D..jpg
Huberman in 2016
Born
Andrew David Huberman

(1975-09-26) September 26, 1975 (age 48) [1]
Palo Alto, California, U.S.
Education University of California, Santa Barbara (BA)
University of California, Berkeley (MA)
University of California, Davis (PhD)
Scientific career
Fields Neuroscience
Institutions Stanford University
University of California, San Diego
Thesis Neural activity and axon guidance cue regulation of eye-specific retinogeniculate development  (2004)
Academic advisors Ben Barres (Stanford)
Barbara Chapman (UCD)
Website hubermanlab.com

Andrew David Huberman (born September 26, 1975) is an American neuroscientist and podcaster. He is an associate professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at the Stanford University School of Medicine. Since 2021, he has hosted the Huberman Lab podcast, which despite its popularity has attracted criticism for promoting poorly supported health claims. [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] Huberman has promoted and partnered with health supplement companies. [4]

Contents

Early life and education

Huberman was born in 1975 at Stanford Hospital in Palo Alto, California, to his father, an Argentine physicist and Stanford professor, and his mother, a children's book author. [7] [8] As a child, he was involved in athletics, including soccer and swimming. [7] He received his early education from Gunn High School. [5]

His parents divorced when he was 12 years old. [7] After his parents' divorce, he disengaged from traditional academics and had an interest in skateboarding. He also briefly considered a firefighting career. [7]

After a break from formal education and a reassessment of his interests influenced by therapy and an interest in biopsychology, Huberman resumed his studies and attended Foothill College. [7]

Huberman received a B.A. in psychology from the University of California, Santa Barbara, in 1998, and an M.A. in psychology from the University of California, Berkeley, in 2000. While at Berkeley, Huberman originally approached Carla J. Shatz to serve as his doctoral advisor; however, she declined the offer, concerned that he had a limited background in molecular and cellular biology and that she would be moving her lab to Harvard. She encouraged Huberman to transfer to the University of California, Davis, and reach out to Barbara Chapman. [9] Huberman obtained a Ph.D. in neuroscience from UC Davis in 2004. [7] [10] For his dissertation, he received the Allan G. Marr Prize for Best Ph.D. Dissertation in 2005. [11]

Academic career

Huberman spent five years at Stanford University as a postdoc under Ben Barres between 2006 and 2011. [12] [11] From 2006 to 2009, he was a Helen Hay Whitney Postdoctoral Fellow. [11] During his postdoctoral work at Stanford, Huberman developed genetic tools to study the visual system and contributed to Thrasher . [7]

From 2011 to 2015, Huberman was an assistant professor of neurobiology and neuroscience at the University of California, San Diego. In 2016, Huberman took a faculty position at Stanford University. [7]

Huberman does research in his lab known as Huberman Lab which he established at the University of California, San Diego, focusing on biological sciences. [7] Later, he transferred his lab to Stanford when he joined there in 2016. [7]

The lab gained attention in 2016 for using virtual reality (VR) to stimulate retinal neuron regrowth. [7] [13] [14] The lab also researched non-pharmacological interventions for anxiety disorders, including VR exposure to controlled stressors and breathing techniques. [7] [15]

In 2023, Huberman's lab, with David Spiegel, published a research paper on stress mitigation and carried out research on cortisol. [7] [10] The lab also released a study on the regeneration of the visual system, contributing to the understanding of stress management techniques and the potential for visual system recovery. [7]

In 2024, New York Magazine stated that Huberman's lab at Stanford "barely exists", with only a single postdoc working there and the lab having been scaled back significantly during the COVID-19 pandemic. A spokesperson for Huberman said that the lab was still operational. [5]

Huberman has also led work investigating the regeneration of eye tissue in mice, which may have a future application in studying optical nerve regeneration in humans. [16] [17]

Podcasts

Huberman was introduced to Robert Mohr in 2019, a New York-based health and fitness publicist who produced "The Fight with Teddy Atlas," a boxing podcast. As the COVID-19 pandemic progressed, Huberman grew dissatisfied with what he viewed as health authorities' narrow focus on the virus without providing guidance for improving public health. Mohr facilitated Huberman's appearances on major podcasts, including those hosted by Joe Rogan and Rich Roll. These appearances helped increase his social media following. By the end of 2020, Huberman had appeared on Lex Fridman's technology podcast. Fridman encouraged him to start his own podcast. [7]

In 2021 Huberman launched the Huberman Lab podcast. [10] In the same year, Huberman and Mohr co-founded Scicomm Media to produce science-related content. [7] As of 2023, the podcast had become the third most popular podcast in the US on Spotify platforms and the most followed show on Apple Podcasts. [18] [19] In 2023 GQ magazine called it "one of the most listened to shows in the world." [2] His YouTube channel has 5.1 million subscribers and his Instagram account has 5.5 million. [20] [21] [22]

According to biologist Andrea Love, Huberman's podcast content is characteristic of pseudoscience, often presenting health claims as scientific when they are in reality insufficiently backed by scientific evidence, or simply wrong. [3] Jonathan Jarry from the Office for Science and Society has questioned Huberman's promotion of "poorly regulated" dietary supplements. According to Jarry, The Huberman Lab podcast has been sponsored by "companies offering questionable products from the perspective of science-based medicine". [4] Joseph Zundell, a cancer biologist, trusts Huberman's expertise in neuroscience but also criticized him for extrapolating animal research for human use without appropriate scientific justification and straying from his area of expertise. [20] These criticisms were echoed by New York Magazine, which also stated that Huberman often "posits certainty where there is ambiguity". [5] Neuroscientist David Berson, who has known Huberman since his postdoctoral research and has been a guest on his podcast, says that Huberman's research is respected among neuroscientists and described his podcast as "a fabulous service for the world" and a way to "open the doors" to the world of science. [20]

According to an article in Coda, Huberman has promoted anti-sunscreen views on his podcast, saying he is "as scared of sunscreen as I am of melanoma" and claiming that molecules in some types of sunscreen can be found in neurons 10 years after application without providing any evidence. [6] In a 2023 GQ article, Huberman said that he is not a "sunscreen truther" – a term used to describe anti-sunscreen conspiracy theorists. [23] Huberman has also expressed scepticism towards fluoridation and flu vaccination, despite scientific evidence for their effectiveness. [3]

Awards and recognition

Selected publications

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. "@hubermanlab" (Andrew D. Huberman, Ph.D.) on Twitter
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  3. 1 2 3 Love A (27 March 2024). "So, Should You Trust Andrew Huberman?". Slate.
  4. 1 2 3 Jarry J (7 April 2023). "Andrew Huberman Has Supplements on the Brain". McGill University Office for Science and Society. Retrieved 2023-06-15.
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  6. 1 2 Beres D (October 3, 2023). "The dangerous myths sold by the conspiritualists". Coda.
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  8. Lester Black (June 27, 2023). "How a Stanford professor became one of the world's top podcasters". SFgate.com . Retrieved June 27, 2023.
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  13. Lim JH, Stafford BK, Nguyen PL, Lien BV, Wang C, Zukor K, He Z, Huberman AD (August 12, 2016). "Neural activity promotes long-distance, target-specific regeneration of adult retinal axons". Nature Neuroscience. 19 (8): 1073–1084. doi:10.1038/nn.4340. PMC   5708130 . PMID   27399843.
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