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Wim Crusio was born on 20 December, 1954 in Bergen op Zoom, The Netherlands, is a Dutch behavioral neurogeneticist. Discover Wim Crusio's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 69 years old?

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Age 69 years old
Zodiac Sign Sagittarius
Born 20 December, 1954
Birthday 20 December
Birthplace Bergen op Zoom, The Netherlands
Nationality The Netherlands

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 20 December. He is a member of famous with the age 69 years old group.

Wim Crusio Height, Weight & Measurements

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Wim Crusio Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Wim Crusio worth at the age of 69 years old? Wim Crusio’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from The Netherlands. We have estimated Wim Crusio's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
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Timeline

1954

Wim E. Crusio (born Wilhelmus Elisabeth Crusio on 20 December 1954) is a Dutch behavioral neurogeneticist and a directeur de recherche (research director) with the French National Centre for Scientific Research in Talence, France.

1975

Crusio received his bachelor's degree in biology from Radboud University Nijmegen in 1975, where he went on to obtain a master's degree and then a PhD in 1979 and 1984, respectively.

1979

His Anubias revision, which was originally published in 1979, was translated in German and continues to engender interest.

For his PhD thesis, Crusio studied the inheritance of the effects of anosmia on exploratory behavior of mice, and more in general the genetic architecture of exploratory behavior, using quantitative-genetic methods such as the diallel cross.

1984

From 1984 to 1987, Crusio worked as a postdoc at the University of Heidelberg, supported by a NATO Science Fellowship and an Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellowship.

1988

During 1988, Crusio spent a year in Paris, France, supported by a fellowship from the Fyssen Foundation.

He then returned to Heidelberg as a senior research scientist before being recruited as chargé de recherche by the CNRS, initially working in an institute of the Université René Descartes (Paris V) and later moving to the CNRS campus in Orléans, having been promoted to directeur de recherche.

1991

He is also an academic editor of PLoS ONE and served as associate editor of Behavioral and Brain Sciences (1991–2008) and The Scientific World Journal (2002-2011).

Crusio serves or has served on the editorial boards of Behavioral and Brain Functions, Behavior Genetics (1991–1995), Behavioural Brain Research (1997–2007), BMC Neuroscience, BMC Research Notes, Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, Journal of Visualized Experiments, Molecular Brain (2012-2017), Neurogenetics (1998–2006), Physiology and Behavior, and Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences.

He edited special issues for the journals Behavior Genetics, Behavioural Brain Research, Physiology and Behavior (with Robert Gerlai), Hippocampus (with Aryeh Routtenberg), and Brain Research Bulletin (with Catherine Belzung and Robert Gerlai).

Together with Robert Gerlai he also edited a handbook on molecular genetic techniques for behavioral neuroscience.

1995

Crusio also served on the executive committees of the Behavior Genetics Association (from which he resigned in protest to Glayde Whitney's 1995 presidential address), the European Brain and Behaviour Society, and the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society, and has been a President of the Dutch Behavior Genetics Contact Group.

1996

In 1996, Crusio was one of two co-founders of the International Behavioural and Neural Genetics Society, for which he served as member-at-large of the executive committee, treasurer, and president (1998–2001).

2000

In 2000 he became full professor of psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester, Massachusetts, returning to the CNRS in 2005 as a group leader in the Centre de Neurosciences Intégratives et Cognitives in Talence, a suburb of Bordeaux.

He is currently adjunct director of the Institut de Neurosciences Cognitives et Intégratives d'Aquitaine.

Crusio and his collaborators found that neuroanatomical variations in the mouse hippocampus, in particular the sizes of their intra- and infrapyramidal mossy fibers (IIPMF) correlated with learning performance.

Together with Herbert Schwegler and Hans-Peter Lipp, Crusio showed that an inverse correlation, that is, animals with larger IIPMF learn better, could be found for spatial learning in a radial arm maze task.

Taken together, Crusio and collaborators think that it is highly likely that this correlation is causal, although this is not universally accepted.

When mice are exposed to unpredictable chronic mild stress (UCMS), they start exhibiting symptoms reminiscent of major depressive disorder in humans.

As it had been suggested that deficits in hippocampal neurogenesis might underlie depression, Crusio and collaborators undertook a series of experiments investigating changes in behavior and neurogenesis in mice that had undergone UCMS.

They showed dramatic changes in levels of aggression, anxiety, depressive-like behaviors, and learning, with a concomitant drop in neurogenesis.

However, the results were strain- and sex-specific and there did not appear to be a clear-cut correlation between the different changes, so that they finally concluded that although their data do not disprove the idea that deficits in hippocampal neurogenesis solely underlie the behavioral impairments observed in human psychiatric disorders such as depression, they do not provide support for this hypothesis either.

More recently, Crusio has been investigating the possibility that Fmr1 knockout mice might perhaps be used as a model for autism.

This idea is based on the fact that patients suffering from the Fragile X syndrome, caused by a deficiency of the FMR1 gene often show autistic symptoms.

A good mouse model for the Fragile X syndrome is available in the form of mice in which the Fmr1 gene (the mouse homologue of the human FMR1 gene) has been invalidated.

A review of the findings obtained with these mice in many different laboratories did indeed indicate that these animals display autistic-like symptoms, especially changes in social behavior, a key symptom of autism.

2001

Crusio is the founding editor-in-chief of Genes, Brain and Behavior, which he edited from 2001 to 2011.

The standards for the publication of mouse mutant studies that he and his co-editors developed for this journal are gradually being accepted in the field.

2008

He has been a member of several program committees for scientific meetings, most notably the 8th and 10th World Congresses of Psychiatric Genetics and the 2008, 2009 (co-chair), 2010 (chair), and 2011 (chair) Annual Meetings of the IBNS.

According to Google Scholar, Crusio's works have been cited over 10,000 times and he has an h-index of 46.

Some significant papers are:

2011

In 2011 he received from this society the "Distinguished Service Award", which is given for exceptional contributions to the field of behavioral neurogenetics.

2013

Currently, he is editing the Cambridge Handbooks in Behavioral Genetics, a series of handbooks published by Cambridge University Press, of which the first volume, Behavioral Genetics of the Mouse: Genetics of Behavioral Phenotypes, appeared in 2013.

Since then, two more volumes have appeared.

2017

Since 2017, Crusio is the editor-in-chief of Behavioral and Brain Functions and since 2019 co-editor of Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology.