Most of Young's scientific research was on the
nervous system. He discovered the
squid giant axon and the corresponding
squid giant synapse. His work in the 1930s on signal transmission in, and the fiber structure of, nerves inspired the work of Sir
Andrew Huxley and Sir
Alan Hodgkin for which they received a
Nobel Prize. During
World War II, responding to the large number of nerve injuries sustained by soldiers in combat and drawing on his work in comparative anatomy and the regrowth of damaged nerves in squids and octopuses, Young set up a unit at the
University of Oxford to study nerve regeneration in mammals. His team investigated the biochemical conditions which control nerve fiber growth and also sought ways to accelerate the repair of peripheral nerves severed by injury. Working with
Peter Medawar, Young found a way to rejoin small peripheral nerves using a "glue" of plasma. This method was eventually modified and used in surgery. After WWII, Young's research interests turned to investigating the central nervous system and the functions of the brain. He discussed and corresponded with the mathematician
Alan Turing on
brain cells,
memory,
pattern recognition, and
embryology, from 1949. In 1950, Young was invited by the
BBC to deliver the
Reith Lectures. In his series of eight radio broadcasts, titled
Doubt and Certainty in Science, he introduced the BBC audience to the themes of his research, exploring the function of the brain and the then-current scientific methods used to increase understanding of it. In 1971, Young was named an honorary member of the
American Association for Anatomy. However, Young is probably best remembered for his two textbooks,
The Life of Vertebrates and
The Life of Mammals. He was President of the
Marine Biological Association (MBA) from 1976 to 1986. His personal research library is held in the
National Marine Biological Library at the MBA. ==Personal life==