Frackowiak has been married twice and has three children from his first marriage. He lives in Paris with his second wife, science journalist
Laura Spinney.
Professional career From 1984 to 1993, Frackowiak directed the neurology service of the
Hammersmith Hospital in London, and from 1988 to 1993 he was deputy director of the
Medical Research Council Cyclotron Unit at the same hospital. In 1990, he took up a joint chair of neurology at Hammersmith and the
UCL Institute of Neurology in
Queen Square, London where, in 1994, he founded the Wellcome Department of Imaging Neuroscience and its Functional Imaging Laboratory (FIL). Terry Jones was his mentor in neuroimaging, and
Karl J. Friston,
Chris Frith and
Raymond Dolan were founding principal investigator colleagues at the FIL. Between 2003 and 2009 he directed the Department of Cognitive Studies (DEC) of the
École normale supérieure (Paris), where he and others created a joint Masters programme in Brain and Mind Sciences between what was then
Pierre and Marie Curie University (part of
Sorbonne University), the École normale supérieure and UCL. He sits on the Board of directors of the
Brain and Spine Institute in Paris, whose neuroimaging activities he helped set up. He served as scientific advisor to the President-Director General of
the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research (Inserm) between 2007 and 2014, and in 2010 he led an international jury selecting the best research projects of the
French instituts hospitalo-universitaires (IHU) investment programme created the previous year by the French President
Nicolas Sarkozy. Concurrently he joined the jury of the ''Initiative d'excellence'' (IDEX) partner programme, that was designed to promote the consolidation and transformation of French universities. In 2009, he was named professor and head of the neurology service of the
Lausanne University Hospital of the
University of Lausanne (UNIL) in
Switzerland. In 2013, he took up a post as titular professor at the
École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), in the laboratory of neuroscientist
Henry Markram’s
Blue Brain Project. With Markram and physicist Karlheinz Meier, he launched the
Human Brain Project, which was financed partly by the
European Commission, becoming its medical co-director. He retired from his clinical and HBP-related activities in 2015, but remains scientifically active as a titular professor at the EPFL and as a permanent visitor at the École normale supérieure in Paris. He is a professor emeritus at UCL. As chair of the medical sciences committee of
Brussels-based
Science Europe, in 2016 he lobbied successfully for exemptions to the
European Union (EU)’s
General Data Protection Regulation, to facilitate data-led clinical and public health research in the EU. ==Research==