https://cnl.salk.edu/~philip/Philip_Low_Resume.pdf
Dr. Low made his first scientific discovery at Harvard Medical School as a teenager. While inventing new brain monitoring
techniques at the University of Chicago, he was referred to the Salk Institute by Francis Crick, Nobel Laureate of DNA fame,
where he authored a 1 page PhD thesis on dynamic brain activity mapping unanimously approved by a committee of two
past presidents of the Society for Neuroscience (SfN) and four members of the National Academy of Sciences, including his
co-advisors, Drs. Terry Sejnowski and Fred Gage. The thesis work led to his creation of NeuroVigil, the neurotechnology
company responsible for iBrainTM, a portable brain activity monitor, with first and second round valuations two and two-and-
a-half times Googles and Facebooks combined, respectively, as well as to his writing of the Cambridge Declaration on
Consciousness, the first formal document officially recognizing consciousness in non-humans by demonstrating that
features thought to be at best unique to the human brain were not necessary for features for which consciousness is thought
to be necessary the signing of which by neuroscientists was described as a Copernican moment in the history of
civilization which has led to a worldwide debate and to the evolution of the treatment and rights of non-humans.
He was appointed to dual positions at the Stanford School of Medicine and the MIT Media Lab in his twenties. His research
Link to Cambridge Declaration On Consciousness:
https://fcmconference.org/img/CambridgeDeclarationOnConsciousness.pdf