
Nature News reports that UCL will host a centre of excellence for neuroscience research:
University College London (UCL) will host the new centre, after beating rival universities Oxford and Cambridge, Nature has learned. The £140-million (US$261-million) institute will be funded by the Wellcome Trust, the largest UK research charity, and the Gatsby Charitable Foundation, founded by David Sainsbury, a British politician and businessman. The individuals involved declined to comment, but Richard Morris, head of neuroscience at the Wellcome Trust, says no decision has been made.
The aim of the centre will be to "elucidate how neural circuits carry out information processing that underpins behaviour", according to the charities' letter to the universities competing for the project, sent earlier this year. The institute will take an interdisciplinary approach, combining state-of-the-art molecular and cellular biology with computational modelling.
UCL may have beaten competitors because its 400-strong neuroscience department is one of the most productive in the country. And it already has a world-class computational neuroscience centre, also funded by the Gatsby foundation.













Comments (5)
Excellent! This is one of the reasons why I would like to take up a PhD. at UCL, an institution where I would have done my MSc. if it were possible.
There is always hope.. but it is nice to know how UCL has beaten Oxbridge at gaining the funding to build this new centre. Naturally this means that we can expect some exciting stuff to come out of UCL after the centre is built.
Posted by: Hesistant Iconoclast | August 23, 2008 8:26 PM