Dr. Stuart Maudsley graduated from the University of Leeds with First Class Honors degree in Pharmacology and was awarded the Pfizer Prize for undergraduate research. For his doctoral research Stuart was awarded the Ackroyd, Brotherton and Brown Scholarship at the University of Leeds. Stuart was then awarded a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Fellowship to train with Professor Robert Lefkowitz (2012 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry) at Duke University. After this post-doctoral fellowship Stuart was recruited to be Principal Investigator of the Receptor Biology Section at the Medical Research Council (MRC) -Human Reproductive Sciences Unit within the University of Edinburgh. During his time at the MRC he developed novel prostate cancer therapeutics based upon his research into G protein-coupled receptor pluridimensional signaling. To broaden his already considerable biomedical experience Stuart then accepted the position of Head of the Receptor Pharmacology Unit at the National Institutes of Health – National Institute on Aging at the Johns Hopkins University Medical Center. While at the NIH Stuart was the recipient of the coveted NIH ‘Bench-to-Bedside’ Translational Research Grant Award, one of the few awards available at the intramural NIH program. Upon starting a new family, and returning to Europe, Stuart continued his rigorous scientific training with the award of the highly-valued Odysseus Program Type I Grant to work as both the Adjunct Director of the VIB Center for Molecular Neurology and also Vice-Chair of the Department of Biomedical Sciences at the University of Antwerp.