Jigyasa Jyotika

Stories from Jigyasa Jyotika

Wednesday, October 2nd, 2013

Fundamental science has yielded a plethora of miraculous medical applications and yet, not enough.

Tuesday, October 1st, 2013

Globalization has rapidly been shrinking the world in general and the scientific world in particular. It is with this vision that Ryoji Noyori, President, RIKEN, Japan's largest multidisciplinary research organization and the 2001 Chemistry Nobel-laureate sees his recent collaboration with NCBS and its allied institutions to launch a joint research center.

Wednesday, June 26th, 2013

Research funding is a limited resource, even for the largest of global science foundations, and is typically awarded, after much deliberation, to the best investigators and institutes, via a streamlined decision-making process.

One of the largest such foundations is the UK based independent global charity, the Wellcome Trust. It funds high-impact biomedical research in the UK and internationally, made possible by its current invested endowment of about £16 billion. Kevin Moses, Director of Science Funding at the Wellcome Trust was recently on campus to talk about the Wellcome Trust as a global bio-medical research funder and bring the community up to speed with its world-wide activities.

Thursday, April 25th, 2013

In solidarity with biologist Sydney Brenner, a 2002 Nobel prize awardee in Physiology or Medicine, who believes that the experimental animal of the 21st century is man, researchers the world over, have been developing initiatives to bring the concept of translational medicine - 'from bench to bedside' - closer to reality.

Along these lines, the Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine (InStem), the National Center for Biological Sciences (NCBS) and the University of Edinburgh have recently set up a collaborative Center for Brain Development and Repair, to foster clinical research on brain disorders. The center will be based at inStem and directed by Sumantra Chattarji, with Siddharthan Chandran and Peter Kind from the University of Edinburgh as its Associate Directors. With an initial thrust on Autism Spectrum Disorders/Intellectual Disabilities (ASD/ID), the center will later expand its focus to develop novel therapeutic interventions for other degenerative brain disorders, such as dementia.

Sir John Savill, Vice-principal and Head of the College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine at the University of Edinburgh and Chief Executive of the UK Medical Research Council (MRC) was recently at NCBS, in connection with the collaboration and also to deliver a talk titled '100 years of the MRC'.

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