Robert J. and Nancy D. Carney Institute for Brain Science

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Researchers affiliated with Brown University's Carney Institute for Brain Science have won the 2021 National Institutes of Health “Show Us Your BRAINs!” contest for a video highlighting efforts to help people with the most severe and hard-to-treat form of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).
August 5, 2021 News from Brown

To advance human rights, consult neuroscience

Scholars at Brown found that brain science bolsters long-held notions that people thrive when they enjoy basic human rights such as agency, freedom from want, and freedom from fear.
News from Carney

Community Spotlight: Ahmed Abdelfattah

For neuroscientist Ahmed Abdelfattah, brain science is simply exciting. He believes that with the right tools scientists can shine light on previously unknown brain processes, getting one step closer to demystifying brain function at cellular and network levels.
News from Carney

Predicting Alzheimer's disease

Cancers are complex and hard to predict, but, having developed new models to predict lung cancer survival based on tumor heterogeneity, Ani Eloyan, assistant professor of biostatistics, is now tackling an even more complex and enigmatic organ—the human brain. Eloyan’s goal is to better predict the trajectory of disease for people with early-onset Alzheimer’s.
News from Carney

A biostatistics omnivore

Lorin Crawford is working hard to expand the scope of the field of biostatistics.
Brown Alumni & Friends

The best way to fight Alzheimer’s? Together.

By convening innovative researchers across academia, Brown’s new Center for Alzheimer’s Disease Research hopes to accelerate the pace of development for treatments and cures of this devastating disease.
Medicine@Brown

Two studies test Alzheimer’s prevention

The fear of developing Alzheimer’s disease is so great among seniors that in medical literature it has its own acronym: FDAD. “It’s the disease that most concerns older people, even more so than cancer,” says Stephen Salloway, MD, director of the Memory and Aging Program at Butler Hospital.
Alzheimer’s disease is a major public health issue that is compounded with health care disparities. In the United States, underrepresented racial and ethnic groups including Black and Hispanic Americans are disproportionately affected by Alzheimer’s disease.