Botond Roska (born 1969) is a Hungarian medical doctor and biomedical researcher. Much of his research is on the pathways of visual perception and how to treat diseases that cause blindness.
Much of Roska's research is on visual perception, including its principles and the pathways of information processing. He also researches therapies to combat visual dysfunction and restore sight to those who are visually impaired.[2] In 2018 his research team succeeded in growing a functional, artificial retina in a laboratory.[4]
Awards and honors
In 2019 he was awarded the Semmelweis Budapest Award, which is the highest award given by Semmelweis University. Also in 2019 he received the Hungarian Order of Saint Stephen, the highest order of Hungary,[8] and the Louis-Jeantet Prize for Medicine.[2] In 2020 he won, as third time to hungarians, the Körber European Science Prize for his research on a gene therapy that could potentially be used to reactivate the retinae of individuals who are blind.[5] In 2024 he was awarded the Wolf Prize in Medicine jointly with José-Alain Sahel for sight-saving and vision restoration to blind people using optogenetics.[9]
^"Botond Roska, M.D., Ph.D."(PDF). Institute for Molecular and Clinical Ophthalmology Basel. June 2020. Archived from the original(PDF) on 7 January 2021. Retrieved 5 January 2021.