
False

About Michael F. Chiang
Director, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA
If you weren’t an ophthalmologist…
I’d be an engineer. I grew up in a family where almost everybody was an engineer, and went to college knowing that I wanted to study electrical engineering (which did end up being my college major). I became a physician because I wanted to develop technologies that could eventually help patients. Throughout my career, I have loved trying to identify and solve problems, and I’m probably still an engineer at heart.
A little-known or interesting thing about you...
As a medical student, I initially thought about becoming a neurosurgeon because I was interested in computational neuroscience and neural networks. For several years, I worked in the lab of Richard H. Masland in the Division of Neurosurgery Research at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. Masland was studying neural information processing – using the rabbit retina as a model system. This is how I became fascinated by the visual system and that’s what made me become an ophthalmologist.
Explore More in Ophthalmology
Dive deeper into the world of Ophthalmology. Explore the latest articles, case studies, expert insights, and groundbreaking research.
Newsletters
Receive the latest Ophthalmology news, personalities, education, and career development – weekly to your inbox.

False
False
False
Disclaimer
The Ophthalmologist website is intended solely for the eyes of healthcare professionals. Please confirm below: