BEIJING, Jan. 15 (Xinhua)-- China's Tsinghua
University has recently signed a cooperative agreement with the McGovern
Institute for Brain Research (MIBR) at the U.S.-based Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT) for a joint neuroscience research program.
The program will promote advances in basic
neuroscience research that can be applied to the study of the human brain, as
well as devastating brain diseases and mental disorders, according to the
agreement.
Chinese scholars from Tsinghua's Institute of Life
Sciences and Medicine and U.S. researchers from MIBR will be able to visit each
other and conduct collaborative researches, the agreement said.
The program may also sponsor joint scientific
meetings for neuroscientists between the two countries, it said.
"The brain disorders we study at the McGovern
Institute are global problems. The progress will surely depend on global
collaborations," said Robert Desimone, MIBR director.
MIBR, established in February 2000 with a donation
from Patrick McGovern, founder of the International Data Group (IDG), and his
wife, aims to help those crippled by Parkinson's disease, schizophrenia, autism
and other mental diseases in search for better treatments.
Hugo Shong, IDG China president, has donated 800,000
U.S. dollars to MIBR to help facilitate exchanges of postdoctoral fellows and
scientists between the institute and three Chinese universities, including the
Beijing-based Tsinghua.
"I greatly admire and share McGovern's vision in
establishing the MIBR at MIT," Shong said. "He has been considering building a
similar institute in Europe and Asia, respectively. I really hope the Asian one
could be set up in China. This will benefit over 80 million people with brain
diseases and mental disorders in China."
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