INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR
CLINICAL ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY of Vision


AWARDS & KEYNOTES HISTORY

Adachi Award  |  Dodt Award  |  Marmor Award  |  Dawson Keynotes

Emiko Adachi’s Award  (→guidelines

This Award is provided through a generous endowment from Emiko Adachi upon her retirement as Professor and Chair of the Department of Ophthalmology at Chiba University, Japan. Hers was a long and glorious career with many honours, culminating in official recognition from the Japanese government. Despite all of this, she remained extraordinarily proud of her long membership of ISCEV, and of her outstanding record of service to this society. This Award is given to an ISCEV member who has, over a long period, given outstanding service to ISCEV and who has made significant contributions to clinical electrophysiology of vision.


# Year Awardee   Award lecture topic (1–3 years later)
17 2023 Prof Don Hood Columbia University, USA

16 2019 Prof Pierre Lachapelle McGill University Health Centre, Canada
Is there a future for clinical electroretinography?
15 2019, 2022
Dr Mitchell Brigell Aerpio Therapeutics. VP, Clinical Research – Ophthalmology
The importance of context: A memoir
   →Video
14 2018 Prof Daphne L McCulloch Optometry & Vision Science, University of Waterloo, Canada What can my baby see? Clinical electrophysiology of infant vision
13 2017 Prof Erich E Sutter Smith-Kettlewell Institute, Francisco, USA; President of Electro-Diagnostic Imaging, Inc. My Adventures on the Way to Multifocal Electrophysiology
12 2016 Prof Laura Frishman University of Houston, USA Electrodiagnostic Testing in the Age of Imaging
11 2015 Prof Michael Bach Freiburg University, Germany Patterns
10 2014 Prof Richard Weleber Oregon Health & Science University, USA Metabolic Disease with Choroidal Atrophy: Gyrate atrophy and LCHADD
9 2013 Prof Mike Marmor Stanford University, USA High standards in retina and art
8 2012 Prof Yutaka Tazawa Iwate Medical University, Japan From memories of my research life in my young days
7 2011 Prof Paul Sieving NEI, USA Translational research with CNTF for retinal neurodegeneration
6 2010 Prof Geoffrey Arden London, UK The pathophysiology and treatment of diabetic retinopathy
5 2009 Prof Yozo Miyake Nagoya University, Japan New clinical entities of complete and incomplete CSNB, and occult macular dystrophy
4 2008 Prof Günter Niemeyer Zürich University, Switzerland A Vision of Electrophysiology
3 2007 Prof William Dawson Miami, USA Maculas, Monkeys, Metabolism, Aging and AMD
2 2006 Prof Eberhart Zrenner Tübingen University, Germany Restoring retinal function: new potentials
1 2005 Prof Colin Barber Nottingham University, UK The far side of the globe

William W Dawson Memorial Keynote Lecture 

Judyth Dawson has generously donated the proceeds from the DTL trademark (Dawson,Trick, Litzkow electrode) to support an annual invited lecture at the ISCEV Annual Symposium.

# Year Speaker   Keynote topic
12 2023 Dr. Masayo Takahashi Faculty of Medicine, Kyoto University, Japan Retinal Cell Therapy – now and future
11 2022 Mr Arvind Chandna
Smith Kettlewell Eye Research Institute, San Francisco, USA Probing visual function in children using steady state sweep VEP   →Video
10 2020 Prof Sylvain Chemtob Department of Ophthalmology, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Sainte Justine Research Center, Montreal, Canada Choroidopathy in Retinopathy of Prematurity: a concern for long-term outcome
9 2019 Prof Hyeong Gon Yu Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, South Korea Genetic screening and clinical characterization for inherited retinal disease
8 2018 Prof Isabelle Meunier Centre national de référence Affections sensorielles génétiques, Montpellier, France Is electrophysiology necessary for the diagnosis of inherited retinal dystrophies at the time of multimodal imaging?
7 2017 Prof Rong Wen Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, Miami, USA Hereditary Retinal Degenerations – What We Have Learned So Far
6 2016 Prof Wong Tien Yin Singapore The Brain as the Natural Extension of the Eye: Insights into Stroke and Dementia
5 2015 Prof Graham E. Holder Moorfields, UK The role of visual electrophysiology in neuro-ophthalmology
4 2014 Dr Artur Cideciyan Scheie Eye Institute, Philadelphia, USA Gene therapy consequences in patients with RPE65-LCA and in animal models
3 2013 Prof Xiong Li Yang Fudan University, China The modulatory role of melatonin on signal transmission in the retina
2 2012 Prof Carmen Ayuso Madrid, Spain Molecular genetics of retinal dystrophies
1 2011 Prof Jerry Fishman Chicago, USA Has electrophysiologic testing become obsolete?

Eberhard Dodt Memorial Award   (→GUIDELINES)

An award, in the value of €3,000, commemorates the life and work of Eberhard Dodt, in particular his help and encouragement, over many years, of young scientists working in the field of clinical electrophysiology of vision. It is awarded to the young scientist who, in the opinion of the Adjudication Panel, makes the best presentation at the Annual Symposium of the International Society for Clinical Electrophysiology of Vision (ISCEV).
Want to donate to this award? Here.

Statements of all recipients after 25 years were collected by Richard Smith and presented as an illustrated book to Frau Dodt at the 2022 Liverpool Symposium. Here is a PDF of the book, without photos.

# Year Recipient   Topic
 27  2023 Lisa
Tucker
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London, UK Mesopic and Photopic PERGs
 26  2022 Xiaofan Jiang ¹Institute of Ophthalmology, University College London, UK; ²Depts of Ophthalmology and Dept of Twin Research and Genetic Epidemiology, King’s College London, UK Exploring longitudinal changes in flicker ERG peak times with age in an adult cohort
 25  2020 Megan Margetts ¹Physiology, Development and Neuroscience, University of Cambridge, UK; ²Institute of Ophthalmology, University College London, UK Rod-driven electroretinogram responses in moderate Vitamin A deficiency are consistent with desensitisation due to an equivalent background
24  2019 Oliver R Marmoy ¹The Tony Kriss Visual Electrophysiology Unit, London; ²Manchester Academy for Healthcare Science Education; UK Diagnosing hemianopic field defects through the differing generators of the pattern onset and offset VEP
23 2018 Safal Khanal New Zealand Effect of atropine on human multifocal electroretinogram responses to defocus
22 2017 Lizhu Yang Laboratory of Visual Physiology, Tokyo, Japan Functional characteristics of East Asian patients with occult macular dystrophy (Miyake’s disease); EAOMD Report No. 2
21 2016 Jeremiah Kah Heng Lim Australia Functional and Structural Insights into Ageing and Alzheimer's Disease in a Murine Model
20 2015 Ana Fakin Slovenia and London Retina-wide disease and foveal sparing in ABCA4-related retinopathy
19 2014 Mathieu Gauvin Montréal, Canada Weighing ON-OFF pathway contribution to the photopic ERG with the discrete wavelet transform
18 2013 Suna Jung Montréal, Canada Blindness following neonatal hypoxia-ischemia: retinal or cortical?
17 2012 Kauro Fujinami London, UK and Tokyo, Japan Genotype-phenotype correlations in Stargardt disease / ABCA4-related retinopathy
16 2011 Ajoy Vincent Toronto, Canada The characterization of specific retinal phenotype in C1QTNF5-related late onset retinal degeneration
15 2010 George Kong Melbourne, Australia Mitochondrial impairment increases neural vulnerability to stress
14 2009 Charlotte M Poloschek Department of Ophthalmology, University of Freiburg, Germany Give and take: the geneticist needs the electrophysiologist but we need the geneticist too
13 2008 Xunda Luo University of Houston College of Optometry, USA Retinal pathway origins of the pattern ERG (PERG)
12 2007 Maja Sustar University Medical Centre Ljubljana, Slovenia The photopic negative response of the flash ERG to broadband and monochromatic stimuli
11 2006 Daniel Barthelmes University Hospital Zurich, Switzerland Detecting visual field constriction in patients with retinitis pigmentosa using quantitative OCT analysis
10 2005 Ruth Hamilton Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Glasgow, UK The ERG in preterm infants
9 2004 Chi D. Luu Eye Research Institute, Singapore Retinal function in myopic adults and children
8 2003 Julie Racine Montréal, Canada Congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB) resulting from lack of rods: The guinea pig model
7 2002 Sharon Elizabeth Morong Toronto, Canada Visual function in infants with infantile spasms before and during Vigabatrin treatment
6 2001 Alison M. Mackay Glasgow, UK A Laplacian electrode montage detects steady-state VEPs faster than a conventional montage (Oz-Fz) in children over three years old
5 2000 LS Mohan Ram LV Prasad Eye Institute, Hyderabad, India An indigenous inexpensive new electrode for recording the ERG
4 1999 Hartmut Schwahn Tübingen, Germany Effects of local anaesthetics on light evoked potentials of the in vitro retina
3 1998 Claudio Macaluso Parma, Italy Visual evoked potentials from paper? Pattern onset cortical responses to a stationary pattern
2 1997 Artur V. Cideciyan Scheie Eye Institute, Philadelphia, PA, USA X-linked retinitis pigmentosa due to a putative null mutation in the RPGR gene: retinal function phenotype and histopathology
1 1996 Maria Kraemer Göteborg, Sweden The neonatal development of the light flash visual evoked response

Marmor Award   (→GUIDELINES)

The Marmor Award for Clinical Innovation in Visual Electrophysiology is designed to serve ISCEV and the discipline of clinical electrophysiology by encouraging new work that will either 1) improve test practicality, e.g. speed, reliability, ease, cost or 2) widen their clinical applicability. The award is made to innovative projects rather than to individuals, and challenges recipients to continue the award-winning initial work to the next level of translation.

The Award is funded by an endowment from Michael Marmor, Professor of Ophthalmology at Stanford University School of Medicine, California, USA.

An initial award of $500 is made to promising projects. A second award of $2500 is made two years later to the initial project that most successfully translated the preliminary work into clinical value.

Awards so far

Year Winning project(s) Winner of Follow-up Award (two years later)
 2020  –

Portable device for VEP examination: continued development.
M Kuba, J Kremláček, F Vít, Z Kubová, J Langrová, J Szanyi; Hradec Králové, Czech Republic

2019 Predictive value of the flicker ERG in patients with diabetic retinopathy.
Mitchell G. Brigell¹, Quentin Davis²;
¹Aerpio Pharmaceuticals, Cincinnati, OH, USA; ²LKC Technologies, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD, USA

Development of a new commercial contact lens electrode.
John R. Hetling¹², Shresta Patangay¹², Jason Park¹, J. Jason McAnany¹, Brett G. Jeffrey³;
¹University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA; ²RetMap, Inc., USA; ³National Eye Institute/NIH, Bethesda, MD, USA

2018 Portable device for VEP monitoring. Kubová Z, Kuba M, Kremláček J, Vít F, Langrová J, Szanyi J; Hradec Králové, Czech Republic
2017 Evaluation of a soft, disposable ERG electrode prototype.
JR Hetling, S Patangay, JC Park, S Rahmani, T Ban and JJ McAnany, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA; RetMap Inc, Grayslake, USA; Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, USA
The SHERG (shorter ERGs) study: Design and rationale for an investigation of the effect of shorter dark-adaptation on ERGs in a large patient cohort.
K Graham, R Hagan, S Walker, H Murray, L Steele and R Hamilton, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde and University of Glasgow, UK and Royal Liverpool University Hospital, Liverpool, UK
2016 The iSIM project: Sensitivity of electrodiagnostic recordings to time domain filtering: a risk to standardised clinical reporting. AC Fisher, M Elt, R Teymouri, A Eleuteri, Royal Liverpool University Hospital, Liverpool, UK
2015 Effect of shorter dark-adaptation on ISCEV standard ERGs and an exploration of the dark-adapted red flash ERG. R Hamilton and K Graham, NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, Glasgow, UK
2014

1. Full field ERGs in individuals with autism spectrum disorder. PA Constable, SB Gaigg, DM Bowler and DA Thompson, City University and Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London, UK

2. A smart ERG signal generator for calibration of instruments and alignment of recording regimes across clinical laboratories. M Elm, AC Fisher, R Laflin, R Teymouri, A Eleuteri and RP Hagan, Royal Liverpool University Hospital, UK


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