Leo de Sonneville
Guest
- Name
- Dr.ir. L.M.J. de Sonneville
- Telephone
- +31 71 527 2727
- l.m.j.de.sonneville@fsw.leidenuniv.nl
- ORCID iD
- 0000-0003-0133-4953
Short CV
Leo de Sonneville is a research neuropsychologist. He graduated as a civil engineer at Delft University of Technology (1972) and as a psychologist at the University of Amsterdam (1981). He received his PhD at the Medical faculty of the VU University Amsterdam (1988). Between 1981-2005 he fully dedicated himself as researcher or PI to the investigation of neuropsychological determinants or consequences of illnesses at the VU University Medical Center, departments of Pediatrics and Pediatric Neurology, and at the Institute of Developmental Neurology of the University Medical Center Groningen.
Since 2005 he has worked as Associate Professor at the Institute for Education and Child Studies, Leiden University, and the Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition. For many years he was visiting researcher in Germany, Austria, Italy and the USA. In Amsterdam and Groningen he investigated the neuropsychological consequences and effects of the treatment of somatic diseases, such as (pediatric) neurological dysfunction, PKU, leukemia (ALL) and MS.
Research
His research in Leiden focuses on the investigation of risk factors for the development of psychopathology and its consequences in children and adolescents (ADHD, autism, psychosis, Klinefelter syndrome). His work reflects a broad and passionate interest in the (development of) basic processes that underlie the execution of complex cognitive processes, in particular attention and executive functions, in relation to neurological and psychiatric disorders.
Leo designed and developed the Amsterdam Neuropsychological Tasks (ANT) programme, which is used in many institutes in The Netherlands and abroad for diagnostic purposes as well as scientific research.
Awards
P&C Hoofdprijs (Psychology and Computers Award) 1995; issued by the NIP (Dutch Institute for Psychologists), acknowledgement of the ANT programme as the “best computer application in the field of applied psychology”.
Grants
Since 1985 Leo de Sonneville has received € 1.7 million (uncorrected for inflation) of research grants. The most important sponsors were the Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development (ZonMw) and the Dutch Cancer Society.
Relevant links
Additional activities
Leo de Sonneville is director of Sonares BV in Amsterdam. This company takes care of further development and maintenance of the ANT programme, the distribution of the ANT programme abroad, and gives advice on research protocols implementing the ANT programme and analysis of ANT data.
Guest
- Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen
- Instituut Pedagogische Wetenschappen
- Neuropedagogiek en ontwikk. stoornissen
- Huijbregts S.C.J., Noort A., De Sonneville L.M.J. & Swaab H. (15 October 2009), Cognitive functioning in Neurofibromatosis Type I: Influence of maturation and ADHD-symptomatology. Society for the Study of Behavioural Phenotypes. Cambridge, UK. [lecture].
- Van Rijn S., Aleman A., De Sonneville L.M.J. & Swaab H. (4 September 2009), Autism traits and schizotypal traits in a genetic syndrome (47,XXY): The role of executive functioning. Paper presented at a meeting on schizophrenia research organized by Brown University. Mont-Tremblant, Canada. [lecture].
- Schuitema I., Sanz-Arigita E.J., Van Dijk B.W., Duizer A.I., Barkhof F., Stam C.J., Van den Bos C., Veerman A.J.P. & De Sonneville L.M.J. (19 April 2007), Underlying mechanisms of late neurocognitive sequelae after treatment of childhood ALL. The European Symposium on late complications after childhood cancer. Lund, Sweden. [lecture].
- De Sonneville L.M.J. (13 September 2006), Psychosocial and Neurocognitive Sonsequences of Childhood Cancer. Symposium in tribute to Raymond Mulhern. Memphis, Tennessee. [lecture].
- De Sonneville L.M.J., Schuitema A.M., Buizer A.I., Barkhof F., Sanz-Arigita E.J., Veerman A.J.P. & Stam J.C. (13 September 2006), Underlying mechanisms of late neurocognitive sequelae after treatment of childhood ALL: Neuro-imaging indices of functional connectivity. symposium in tribute to Raymond Mulhern. Memphis, Tennessee USA. [lecture].
- De Sonneville L.M.J., Buizer A.I., Van den Heuvel-Eibrink M.M., Njiokiktjien C. & Veerman A.J.P. (13 September 2006), Neurocognitive funcion after chemotherapy for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Symposium in tribute to Raymond Mulhern. Memphis, Tennessee. [lecture].
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