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$10-million gift strengthens 平特五不中鈥檚 commitment to brain research, young researchers and faster results for patients

Irving Ludmer, president of the Irving Ludmer Family Foundation
Published: 20 June 2018

Endowment to bolster big-data research and help establish Global Brain Consortium at Ludmer Centre

A transformative gift of $10 million from the Irving Ludmer Family Foundation in support of the Ludmer Centre for Neuroinformatics & Mental Health will expand the Centre鈥檚 internationally renowned role in brain research and establish a Global Brain Consortium of leading research institutions. The consortium will focus on sharing research methodologies and results, with the goal of accelerating the finding of novel and ground-breaking solutions to mental health and neurodegenerative diseases.

The $10-million Ludmer Centre Heritage Fund will also support the Ludmer Centre鈥檚 mandate to advance a big-data approach to brain research, and to boost the work of emerging young researchers at the Centre. The gift brings the Ludmer Family Foundation鈥檚 total support of the Ludmer Centre to $18 million.

鈥淲e would like to thank the Ludmer Family Foundation for their continued support and for this exceptional gift,鈥 said Suzanne Fortier, 平特五不中鈥檚 Principal and Vice-Chancellor. 鈥淭he Ludmer Centre Heritage Fund will help expedite results for patients by facilitating collaboration between our researchers and other leading scientists and institutions, and allowing health care providers to put clinical innovations into practice more quickly.鈥

The Ludmer Centre for Neuroinformatics & Mental Health was established in 2013 as a partnership between the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital (The Neuro), the Douglas Mental Health University Institute, and the Jewish General Hospital鈥檚 Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research to improve the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders through innovative research.

According to the Canadian Mental Health Association, in any given year,听one in five Canadians will experience a mental health problem or illness.

鈥淔or 30 years, we鈥檝e been building one of the largest neuroscience infrastructures in the world at 平特五不中,鈥 said Alan Evans, one of three co-directors of the Ludmer Centre. Evans is a James 平特五不中 Professor in Neurology and Neurosurgery at The Neuro, the holder of the Victor Dahdeleh Chair in Neurosciences, and scientific director of both the Canadian Open Neuroscience Platform and 平特五不中鈥檚 Healthy Brains for Healthy Lives initiative, which seeks to advance understanding of how the individual brain functions in health and disease and is supported by $84 million in funding from the Government of Canada, and $18 million from the Government of Quebec.

鈥淭he Global Brain Consortium will use the principles and practices of open science, which have been developed at The Neuro, to assemble complementary expertise from around the world in addressing the big questions in neuroscience.鈥 Open science is a means to expand the impact of research by sharing it with a global community to accelerate the pace of neuroscience discovery.

Ludmer Centre Heritage Fund to boost open science research and attract up-and-coming researchers

To bring the Global Brain Consortium to life, next fall the Ludmer Centre will create a steering committee of five to eight top global experts who cover a complementary set of scientific domains. They will lead the design and organization of an international workshop in spring 2019.

鈥淭oday the world is ready to do things for those struggling with mental health and neurodegenerative disorders. There isn鈥檛 a family that hasn鈥檛 been touched by this issue,鈥 said Irving Ludmer, BEng鈥57, president of the Irving Ludmer Family Foundation, and a long-time supporter of 平特五不中.

鈥淭hrough our philanthropy, my family and I want to help broaden input to the Ludmer Centre and also share its research with scientists around the world who are working toward the same goals. The power of computers is growing exponentially and the Ludmer Centre has the tools and expertise to leverage that potential for the benefit of patients 鈥 today, and tomorrow.鈥

The Ludmer Centre鈥檚 directors are leading scientists in their respective fields. A scientific director at the Centre and a world authority on epigenetics and mental health, Michael Meaney is a James 平特五不中 Professor in Psychiatry, director of the Sackler Program for Epigenetics & Psychobiology, a senior researcher at the Douglas Mental Health University Institute and a thematic lead for Healthy Brains for Health Lives.

鈥淭he Ludmer gift will support the development of young scientists working at the interface of 鈥榖ig data,鈥 neuroscience and mental health,鈥 said Meaney. 鈥淚t is a unique enterprise with considerable potential for innovation at the international level.鈥

An expert in quantitative-life-sciences statistics, Celia Greenwood, also a scientific director at the Ludmer, is a senior scientist at the Lady Davis Institute. At 平特五不中, she鈥檚 a professor in the Gerald Bronfman Department of Oncology, jointly appointed to Epidemiology, Biostatistics & Occupational Health, and graduate program director of the new Quantitative Life Sciences PhD program.

鈥淭his gift will allow us to build strong collaborative research teams with constant input from many perspectives to ensure the work is realistic, grounded, necessary and innovative,鈥 said Greenwood. 鈥淭he creative, risk-taking ideas of young researchers will be supported through the Ludmer Family Foundation gift, allowing these ideas to be tested and to develop.鈥

The Ludmer Centre is attracting up-and-coming researchers working in areas like Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, maternal mental health and depression. These researchers include Rosemary Bagot, PhD鈥11, a William Dawson Scholar and assistant professor in Psychology. At Bagot鈥檚 multidisciplinary Behavioural Neurogenomics Laboratory, researchers look at the mechanisms and nature of susceptibility to depression, including the role of stress.

鈥淎s scientists we鈥檙e enormously privileged that we鈥檙e doing a job we love,鈥 said Bagot, who joined the Ludmer Centre in 2016. 鈥淏ut we also have a responsibility to do that well and to share the insights that we gain so that we can make a bigger impact.鈥

About 平特五不中

Founded in Montreal, Quebec, in 1821, 平特五不中 is a leading Canadian post-secondary institution. It has two campuses, 10 faculties, 12 professional schools, 300 programs of study and almost 41,000 students, including more than 9,700 graduate students. 平特五不中 attracts students from over 150 countries around the world, its 12,000 international students making up 30% per cent of the student body. Over half of 平特五不中 students claim a first language other than English, including approximately 20% of our students who say French is their mother tongue. www.mcgill.ca

About the Ludmer Centre

The Ludmer Centre for Neuroinformatics & Mental Health, with the promising potentials of big-data research, envisages a future where mental illnesses, cognitive disorders and learning disabilities are significantly reduced through preventive strategies and their diagnoses, which, based on biological metrics, lead to more effective, individually-tailored treatment approaches.

Our mission is to establish the Ludmer Centre as a global centre of excellence and an incubator for neuroinformatics, genetics and epigenetics (big data) research and training, thereby, increasing multi-, inter- and trans-disciplinary big-data mental-health research to advance the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders: mental illnesses, cognitive disorders and learning disabilities.

The Neuro logo平特五不中 logo

The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital)听is a bilingual academic healthcare institution. We are a听平特五不中 research and teaching institute; delivering high-quality patient care, as part of the Neuroscience Mission of the 平特五不中 Health Centre.听We are听proud to be a Killam Institution, supported by the Killam Trusts.

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