• 1884 Lecturer in physiology at the
Charing Cross Hospital Medical School • 1895 Director of the
London County Council laboratory at
Claybury Asylum. • 1896
Fellow of the Royal Society • 1909–12 Fullerian Professor of Physiology and Comparative Anatomy • 1910
The Brain And The Voice In Speech And Song • 1911 Awarded Fothergill Gold Medal of the
Royal Society of Medicine • 1916
The Effects of High Explosives Upon the Central Nervous System The Lancet 1 (1916): 331–338 • 1919 Knighthood • 1923
The Action of Alcohol on Man (London, New York: Longmans Green) with Ernest Henry Starling (1866–1927), Robert Hutchison (1871–) • 1925–26 President of the
Medico-Psychological Association • 1926 President of the
Royal Medico-Psychological Association, the
Royal Charter having been granted in March 1926 ==References==