On March 25th, recently appointed Swiss Consulate General, Mr. Beat Kaser, held the inaugural 5 à 7 Scientifique receptions in honour of Brain@۲ݮƵ’s ongoing international partnerships with the Neuroscience Center of Zurich. The ۲ݮƵ-ZNZ partnership, formally established October 2010, promotes scientific exchanges in neuroscience research and is the second major partnership agreement Brain@۲ݮƵ has signed. The two other partnerships include Oxford University and Imperial College London.
The reception commenced with opening remarks shared by Mr. Kaser, Mr. Eli Turk, Director International Relations at ۲ݮƵ, Dr Philippe Gros, Vice-Dean-Life Sciences, Faculty of Medicine at ۲ݮƵ, and Dr. Claudio Cuello, Chair for Brain@۲ݮƵ, on the importance of nurturing networking opportunities between Quebec, Canada, and Switzerland.
Consul General of Switzerland Mr. Beat Kaser inaugurates the 5 à 7 Scientifique receptions for the coming year. From left to right: Mr. Sebastian Hug, Higher Education and Partnerships at Swissnex Boston, Mr. Beat Kaser, and Dr. Claudio Cuello, Chair Brain@۲ݮƵ.
Dr. Anne McKinney, Vice-chair for Brain@۲ݮƵ, delivered a presentation reflecting on the advances made as a result of this special partnership, including: increased funding opportunities for collaborative projects based on scientific excellence; the exchange of students and staff between the institutions; and the promotion of research initiatives bridging basic and clinical neuroscience based on complementary expertise. The Brain@۲ݮƵ and ZNZ have 14 pilot projects funded to date. Some examples of ۲ݮƵ-ZNZ funded projects include the rehabilitation of patients with Autosomal Recessive Spastic ataxia of Charlevoix Saguenay, pathophysiology of multiple sclerosis, stroke and brain plasticity, spinal injury repair, and mechanisms of neurodegeneration in APP-transgenic rats, a new model of Alzheimer’s disease.
- In photo: Dr. Anne McKinney, Vice-chair for Brain@۲ݮƵ, reflects on the neuroscience projects made possible by the ۲ݮƵ-ZNZ partnerships.
Anticipated benefits of the partnership include: increased visibility and impact of science; the fostering of excellence and international recognition; the facilitation of translational research and technological development in biomedicine; the enhanced training and mobility of highly qualified students; and the better use of resources of state-of-the-art infrastructure.
From left to right: Dr. Anne McKinney, Imperial College London neuroscience exchange students Rose Mulvey, Mira Deshmukh, Franceso Fiorini, and Mr. Eli Turk. |
The partnership strategy is two-fold: “bottom-up,” to allow individual research groups to initiate collaborations and pilot projects in all areas of neuroscience research; and “top-down” to pursue joint basic and clinical research projects, with the end goal being promoting and facilitating the transition from basic research to preclinical applications and rehabilitation.
The apex of the event was a sneak preview into the groundbreaking international partnership agreements to be formally signed this summer.
Closing comments from Mr. Sebastien Hug, Higher Education and Partnerships at Swissnex Boston, further endorsed the trailblazing directions set forth by Brain@۲ݮƵ.
From left to right: Mr Patrick Holdich (British Consulate-General Montreal), Mr. Mario Rivero-Huguet (Science andInnovation Officer British Consulate-General Montreal officer), Mr. Beat Kaser (Swiss Consul General) , Dr. Claudio Cuello (Chair Brain@۲ݮƵ) , Dr. Anne McKinney (Vice Chair Brain@۲ݮƵ) , Dr. Phillipe Gros (Vice-Dean, Life Sciences, Faculty of Medicine at ۲ݮƵ), Mr. Eli Turk (Director of International Relations at ۲ݮƵ), Mr. Sebastien Hug (Project Leader Higher Education and Partnerships at Swissnex Boston) |
- posted 19 July 2012 "Swiss delegation lends high-profile support to Brain@۲ݮƵ partnership" read more >