PARIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The 22nd annual Neuronal Plasticity Prize of the Fondation Ipsen has been awarded to Helen J. Neville (University of Oregon, Eugene, USA), Isabelle Peretz (Brams – University of Montreal, Montreal, Canada) and Robert J. Zatorre (Montreal Neurological Institute and Brams Laboratory, Montreal, Canada, USA) for their pioneering research in the domain of “Music and Brain Plasticity”. The €60,000 prize was awarded on July 15, 2011 by an international jury1 led by Professor Nikos Logothetis (Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Tubingen, Germany) at the 8th International Brain Research Organization (IBRO) World Congress of Neuroscience, Florence, Italy.
About the laureates
Helen J. Neville is currently The Robert and Beverly Lewis Endowed Chair and Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience, Director of the Brain Development Lab, and Director of the Center for Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Oregon in Eugene. Her work experience includes Director of the Laboratory for Neuropsychology at the Salk Institute. She has published in many journals such as Nature, Nature Neuroscience, Journal of Neuroscience, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, Cerebral Cortex and Brain Research and has made a DVD about the brain for non-scientists. She has received many honors like being elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Board of Governors of the Cognitive Neuroscience Society, the Academic Panel of Birth to Three and is active in many educational outreach programs. She is known for her research on the role of biological constraints and experience (including music) in brain development including the study of the plasticity of auditory system.
Isabelle Peretz, Ph.D., is Professor of Psychology and the holder of a Canada Research Chair in neurocognition of music. In 2005, she became the founding co-director of the international laboratory for Brain, Music, and Sound research (BRAMS). Dr. Peretz is also the founding Editor-in-chief of Frontiers in Auditory Cognitive Neuroscience, the recipient of several awards, and a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and of the American Psychological Association. She is renowned for her work on congenital and acquired musical disorders (amusia) and for pioneering the study of the biological foundations of music in general. Her research focuses on the musical potential of ordinary people, its neural correlates, its heritability and its specificity relative to language. She has published over 150 scientific papers on a variety of topics, ranging from perception, memory, and emotions to singing and now, dancing.
Robert J. Zatorre is a James McGill professor of neuroscience at the Montreal Neurological Institute of McGill University. Dr. Zatorre’s research explore the functional and structural organization of the human brain using neuroimaging and behavioral methods. His principal research interests relate to the neural substrate for auditory cognition, with special emphasis on two complex and characteristically human abilities: speech and music. He and his collaborators have published over 200 scientific papers on a variety of topics including pitch perception, musical imagery, absolute pitch, music and emotion, perception of auditory space, and brain plasticity in the blind and the deaf. In 2006 he co-founded the international laboratory for Brain, Music, and Sound research (BRAMS), a unique multi-university consortium dedicated to the cognitive neuroscience of music and auditory cognition.
1 Albert Aguayo (Montreal General Hospital, Montréal, Canada), Joël Bockaert (Institut de Génomique Fonctionnelle, Montpellier, France), Alexis Brice (Hôpital de la Salpêtrière, Paris, France), Stanlislas Dehaene (Inserm U562, Orsay, France), Stephen Dunnett (Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom), Kjell Fuxe (Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden), Marc Jeannerod (Institut des Sciences Cognitives, Lyon, France), Christine Petit (Institut Pasteur, Paris, France), Wolf Singer (Max Planck Institute for Brain Research, Frankfurt, Germany).
About the Neuronal Plasticity Prize
Founded in 1990, the
Neuronal Plasticity Prize of the Fondation Ipsen has been awarded to
renowned specialists: Albert Aguayo (Montréal, 1990), Anders
Björklund (Lund, 1990), Fred Gage (La Jolla, 1990), Ursula
Bellugi (La Jolla, 1991), Wolf Singer (Frankfurt, 1990),
Torsten Wiesel (New York, 1991), Philippe Ascher (Paris, 1992),
Kjell Fuxe (Stockholm, 1992), Terje Lomo (Oslo, 1992), Per
Andersen (Oslo, 1993), Masao Ito (Wako Saitama, 1993), Constantino
Sotelo (Paris, 1993), Mariano Barbacid (Princeton, 1994), Yves
Barde (Planegg-Martinsried, 1994), Hans Thoenen (Planegg-Martinsried,
1994), Jacques Mehler (Paris, 1995), Brenda Milner (Montreal,
1995), Mortimer Mishkin (Bethesda, 1995), Friedrich
Bonhoeffer (Tubingen, 1996), Corey Goodman (Berkeley, 1996), Marc
Tessier-Lavigne (San Francisco, 1996), Antonio Damasio (Iowa
City, 1997), Richard Frackowiac (London, 1997), Michael
Merzenich (San Francisco, 1997), Heinrich Betz (Frankfurt,
1998), Gerald Fischbach (Boston, 1998), Uel McMahan (Stanford,
1998), Masakazu Konishi (Pasadena, 1999), Peter Marler (Davis,
1999), Fernando Nottebohm (Millbrook, 1999), Tomas Hökfelt (Stockholm,
2000), Lars Olson (Stockholm, 2000), Lars Terenius (Stockholm,
2000), Albert Galaburda (Boston, 2001), John Morton (Londres,
2001), Elisabeth Spelke (Cambridge, USA, 2001), Arturo
Alvarez-Buylla (San Francisco, 2002), Ronald Mc Kay (Bethesda,
2002), Sam Weiss (Calgary, 2002), François Clarac (Marseille,
2003), Sven Grillner (Stockholm, 2003), Serge Rossignol (Montréal,
2003), James Gusella (Boston, 2004), Jean-Louis Mandel (Strasbourg,
2004), Huda Y. Zoghbi (Houston, 2004), Ann Graybiel (Cambridge,
USA, 2005), Trevor Robbins (Cambridge, UK, 2005), Wolfram
Schultz (Cambridge, UK, 2005, Eckhart D. Gundelfinger (Magdeburg,
2006), Mary B. Kennedy (Pasadena, 2006), Morgan Sheng (Cambridge,
USA, 2006), Nikos K. Logothetis (Tübingen, 2007), Keiji
Tanaka (Wako, 2007), Giacomo Rizzolati (Parma, 2007), Jean-Pierre
Changeux (Paris, 2008), Peter W. Kalivas (Charleston 2008), Eric
J. Nestler (Dallas, 2008), Alim-Louis Benabid (Grenoble, 2009),
Apostolos P. Georgopoulos (Minneapolis, 2009) , Miguel A. L.
Nicolelis (Durham, 2009), Thomas Insel (Bethesda, 2010), Bruce Mc
Ewen (New York, 2010) and Donald Pfaff (New York, 2010).
La Fondation Ipsen
Established in 1983 under the
aegis of the Fondation de France, the mission of the Fondation
Ipsen is to contribute to the development and dissemination of
scientific knowledge. The long-standing action of the Fondation Ipsen aims
at fostering the interaction between researchers and clinical
practitioners, which is indispensable due to the extreme specialisation
of these professions. The ambition of the Fondation Ipsen is to
initiate a reflection about the major scientific issues of the
forthcoming years. It has developed an important international network
of scientific experts who meet regularly at meetings known as Colloques
Médecine et Recherche, dedicated to six main themes: Alzheimer's
disease, neurosciences, longevity, endocrinology, the vascular system
and cancer science. Moreover, in 2007, the Fondation Ipsen started
three new series of meetings. The first series is an annual meeting
organized in partnership with the Salk Institute and Nature and
focuses on Biological Complexity; the second series is the “Emergence
and Convergence” series with Nature, and the third with Cell and
the Massachusetts General Hospital entitled “Exciting Biologies”. Since
its beginning, the Fondation Ipsen has organised more than 100
international conferences, published 70 volumes with renowned publishers
and 216 issues of a widely distributed bimonthly newsletter Alzheimer
Actualités. It has also awarded more than 100 prizes and grants.