News articles
- BRC awards over £500k to neuroscience projects
- ABTA Winners
- Diabetes drug could help treat Parkinson's Disease
- Clinical trials are vital tools in stroke research
- New gene identified for Dominant Congenital Spinal Muscular Atrophy and Hereditary Spastic Paraparesis
- Teaching Awards 2013
- 14th Annual Queen Square Symposium
- TRACK-HD study identifies early predictors of disease progression in Huntington’s disease
- The Great Brain Experiment: crowdsourcing data on how we think and act
- Psychogenic diseases linked to abnormal brain activity
- Human Brain Project wins major EU funding
- Gene mutation causes familial form of cranio-cervical dystonia
- Professor Ray Dolan awarded prestigious Klaus Joachim Zülch Prize
- Professor Dimitri Kullmann elected Editor of Brain
- Hereditary Whispering Dystonia gene identified
- Belgian Stroke Council Award to UCL student
- Professor Nicholas Wood appointed as neuroscience programme director for UCLH NIHR Biomedical Research Centre (BRC)
- UCL neuroscientists awarded highly competitive ERC Advanced Grants
- Drugs could provide new treatment for epilepsy
- Breakthrough in the treatment of drug-resistant epilepsy
- UCL Institute of Neurology enters gene-editing research collaboration with Horizon Discovery
- Lifetime achievement award for Professor Thompson’s MS work
- New biography of Gowers released
- Repurposed cardiac sodium channel blocker brings significant benefit for patients with a rare neuromuscular disease
- Toxic protein build-up in blood shines light on fatal brain disease
- Professor Lees receives prestigious German Society of Neurology award
- Cause of Alternating Hemiplegia identified
- Results from stroke treatment study are in top 10 of Lancet’s most highly cited papers
- Skin patch improves attention span in stroke patients
- Genetic study identifies treatable pathway in childhood motor neuron disease
- Awards and congratulations
- Medical Photographer Wins Wellcome Image Awards
- Prestigious Junior Investigator Award for stroke research
- Unlocking the mysteries of the mind
- Professor Simon Shorvon appointed Harveian librarian at the Royal College of Physicians
- Parliamentary Group Visit the Institute
- Cultural Consultation Service website launches
- Clinical Teaching Awards 2011/12
- Prestigious European Science Foundation networking grant awarded to Institute of Neurology professor
- International project to determine vascular contribution to neurodegeneration begins
- Prime Minister visits UCL Institute of Neurology
- Institute scientist takes his research to Parliament
- Professor Ray Dolan gives the prestigious Alan Turing Lecture
- The Performing Brain – A moving story? Friday 16th March
- Are we hard wired to be rebellious?
- Detecting stroke
- Queen Square Clinical Trial Centre launched
- New funding to preserve unique archives
- Major new funding for research into epilepsy is announced
- Professor Ray Dolan elected Fellow of the APS
- New Years Honours
- Brain Implant Cures Woman's Tourette's Tics
- IoN News Archive (2010)
- IoN News Archive (2009)
- IoN launches new website
- Professor Hardy receives IFRAD 2011 European Grand Prize for Alzheimer's Research
- Medical Illustrators presented prestigious Wellcome Image Award
- Neurodegenerative disease research projects secure international collaborative funding
- Novel treatments for epilepsy
- Stem cell study offers hope for Parkinson’s patients
- Professor Alan Thompson appointed as Dean of UCL Faculty of Brain Sciences
- Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging student receives Young Researcher Award
- UCL Alzheimer’s researcher receives lifetime achievement award
- Dr Jonathan Schott receives the US Alzheimer Association 2011 de Leon Prize in Neuroimaging: New Investigator Award
- Study reveals genetic clues underlying progressive supranuclear palsy
- UCL neuroscientists among the most cited in Parkinson’s disease research
- Professor Maguire awarded Kemali prize
- Award for Professor Roger Lemon
- Professor Dimitri Kullmann recognised for his outstanding research
- 'Consciousness connections' revealed in coma brains
- Four UCL neuroscientists elected to the Academy of Medical Sciences
- May 25 Marks World MS Day
- Prion infection begins after one minute of exposure
- Successes of Deep Brain Stimulation for patients with Parkinson's disease
- Professor Hanna invited to give prestigious ANZAN Lecture
- Severe reaction to epilepsy drug linked to genetic variant
- Rhythm and the perception of time
- How prions propagate
- Understanding how the brain determines coincidence
- Lancet papers testament to clinical impact and significance of neuroscience research at UCL
- World’s first blood test for vCJD
- Researchers identify 5 new genetic variations in total of 11 thought to be important in Parkinson’s Disease risk
- IoN scientist receives prize to promote German-Anglo relations
- Epilepsy surgery shows promising results, says study
- Scientists make step towards better understanding of the brain's teaching signals
- UCL scientists get £88k boost to study hearing problems in Alzheimer’s
- Professor Jon Driver
- Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging researcher scoop Lloyd’s 2011 Science of Risk Prizes
- Launch of the UCL Institute of Neurology YouTube channel
- Researchers move closer to finding successful drugs to treat Huntington’s disease
- Imaging the evolution of multiple sclerosis
- Brain changes seen in cabbies who take 'The Knowledge'
- Professor Brown gives Annual Stroke Association Royal Lecture
- New Institute Director
- Wolfson Foundation awards £20million to UCL for experimental neurology centre
- Thinking of studying at UCL next year?

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Queen Square Alumnus Association Meeting 2013
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UCL neuroscientists awarded highly competitive ERC Advanced Grants
10 December 2012
Congratulations to Professors Dmitri Rusakov (UCL Institute of Neurology), Robin Ali (UCL Institute of Ophthalmology) and Patrick Haggard (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience), who have all recently been awarded European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grants. These highly competitive research grants are among the most sought after Principal Investigator awards offered from the ERC, and as stated on the ERC’s website: “allow exceptional established research leaders of any nationality and any age to pursue ground-breaking, high-risk projects that open new directions in their respective research fields or other domains.”
Professor Dmitri Rusakov and his research group at the Department of Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy (UCL Institute of Neurology) will receive roughly €2.5 million for five years for the study “Signal Formation in neural circuits with astroglia.” Astroglial cells (astrocytes) are a common type of non-neuronal cell found in the brain and spinal cord and their rapidly emerging role in common neurological diseases raises an urgent need to understand the way in which they organise themselves and communicate with neurons in the brain.
Professor Rusakov commented: “Our research will explore the contribution of astrocytes and their assemblies to the key mechanisms of synaptic signal exchange, neural network function and homeostatic plasticity in the brain.”
Professor Haggard (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience) has been awarded about €2 million for the study “Human Volition, Agency and Responsibility (HUMVOL).” In this study, Professor Haggard and his team will use EEG, MRI and behavioural, psychophysical and neural experiments, to investigate the neural bases of human volition, in other words, what happens in our brains when we make our own choices and decisions, as opposed to responding to external instructions. He will also explore the implications the findings this research may have for society, particularly in the area of the law.
Professor Robin Ali and his group (UCL Institute of Ophthalmology) will receive €2.5 million for five years for their study “Generation of stem cell derived photoreceptors for the treatment and modelling of retinal degeneration”. Retinal degenerations leading to loss of photoreceptors are a major cause of untreatable blindness. Currently no treatments restore lost photoreceptor cells and visual function and thus there is a need for new therapeutic approaches. As new photoreceptors need only make short, single synaptic connections to the inner retinal circuitry to contribute to visual function, retinal repair by photoreceptor transplantation represents one of the most feasible types of CNS repair.
Over the past 8 years Professor Ali’s group has developed a comprehensive programme to investigate the potential of photoreceptor cell transplantation to repair degenerating retinae. The study will build on their achievements in the field of donor photoreceptor cell transplantation and will determine if mouse and human pluripotent stem cells have the potential to provide an efficient source of rod photoreceptor precursors for restoring vision and modelling disease processes in vitro.
In a separate achievement, further congratulations go to Professor Rusakov’s, who was also elected to the Academia Europaea (European Academy of Humanities, Letters and Sciences), a group comprising around 2300 European scientists and scholars, including 39 Nobel laureates.
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