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The Ontario Brain Institute: Completing the Circle

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2014

Donald T. Stuss*
Affiliation:
Ontario Brain Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
*
Correspondence to: Donald T. Stuss, President and Scientific Director, Ontario Brain Institute, 438 University Avenue, Suite 1618, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 2K8. Email: dstuss@braininstitute.ca.
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Abstract

The Province of Ontario recognized the pressing need to improve the understanding, diagnosis, and treatment of brain disorders. It also recognized that maximizing the existing strengths through a province-wide integrated approach was a pivotal mechanism. To achieve this, the Province established the Ontario Brain Institute. The goal of this article is to introduce the elements of the Ontario Brain Institute to the neuroscience community: the motivation for establishing it, the philosophy behind its creation, the principles guiding its development, the rapid evolution of its functional structure, the tools available to achieve its vision, and the management structure to ensure success. The singular goal of the Province and the Ontario Brain Institute is a comprehensive system that assures that basic research is embedded in the clinical system and is facilitating product development to accelerate benefits to both health and the economy of health: science with impact.

Résumé

L’Institut ontarien du cerveau : boucler la boucle. La province de l’Ontario a reconnu le besoin pressant d’améliorer la compréhension, le diagnostic et le traitement des troubles cérébraux. Elle a également reconnu que le renforcement des forces existantes dans une approche intégrée à l’échelle de la province était un mécanisme essentiel. Pour y parvenir, la province a créé l’Institut ontarien du cerveau. L’objectif de cet article est de présenter les éléments de l’institut ontarien du cerveau à la communauté des sciences neurologiques : la motivation de sa création, la philosophie qui la sous-tend, les principes guidant son développement, l’évolution rapide de sa structure fonctionnelle, les outils disponibles pour atteindre cette vision et la structure de direction pour assurer la réussite. L’objectif unique de la province et de l’Institut ontarien du cerveau est un système global qui permet l’inclusion de la recherche fondamentale dans le système clinique et qui facilite le développement de produits pour bénéficier encore plus rapidement à la santé et à l’économie de la santé : la science avec un impact.

Information

Type
Review Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an open access article, distributed under the terms of the creative commons attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences Inc. 2014
Figure 0

Figure 1 The OBI system. The four pillars of OBI’s system drive improvement to individual brain health.

Figure 1

Figure 2 Research partnerships. Through the five Integrated Discovery Programs, OBI is engaged in partnerships with 37 institutions to form a network of research collaboration across Ontario.

Figure 2

Figure 3 Layers of interaction and the complexity of brain disorders. Complex interactions occur within and across the layers of biology at the levels of genes, proteins, and metabolism that give rise to the symptoms, behaviours, and phenotypes observed in brain disorder X. In many brain disorders, overlap also occurs between underlying factors of different disorders as illustrated by the cross-talk of genes and proteins shared by disorders X and Y. This complexity and overlap necessitates a research approach set up for study both across the layers of biology and across the disorders. This approach facilitates the study of mechanisms affecting disease expression, with the hope for development of targeted treatments.

Figure 3

Figure 4 Integrated Discovery approach. The integrated approach to research requires that standardized neuroimaging, clinical, genomic, proteomic, and other data are captured from the five research programs in brain disorders: cerebral palsy, epilepsy, neurodevelopmental disorders, neurodegenerative disorders, and depression. This facilitates innovative hypothesis-driven investigation and data-driven discovery approaches both across data modality and across disorders.

Figure 4

Figure 5 The three phases of OBI development. Mapped out as a long-term plan, OBI’s system achieves enormous educational, economic, and health impact as the three phases are implemented. OBI is applying its system to projects across the three phases to deliver scientific, health, economic, and educational impact. This schematic provides a model for visualizing the contribution of each of the three phases, shown as numbered rings: (1) Investigating Disorders of Brain Functioning, (2) Understanding Healthy Brain Functioning, and (3) Optimizing Brain Performance. The spiraling arrows chart a path through the outcomes of each pillar to the four dimensions of impact.