Governmental and Institutional Affairs

Impact: March 2000

Ginette Lamontagne and statue of James McGill

Dear Reader,

I am pleased to communicate with you directly through Impact. The Office of Governmental and Institutional Affairs has been working extensively with all levels of government to communicate our goals and needs as an institution. By hosting events that emphasize the social and economic importance of McGill, by initiating meetings between elected officials and various members of the McGill community, and by disseminating the proposals summarized in our Tradition and Innovation:an International University in a City of Knowledge

We now invite your response and comments on our efforts. We have recently opened new channels through which we hope to encourage and enhance the dialogue through which we have established between McGill and all levels of government. Our redesigned web site is the most recent communication tool that we have created.

We look forward to hearing from you.

Ginette Lamontagne
Executive Director

A recognition of excellence

The Montreal Neurological Institute, a world-renowned teaching and research institute for the neurosciences at McGill, has won a major grant from the United States Institutes of Health. The $9 million (U.S.) is to be used to develop the world's first Paediatric Neuroanatomy Atlas, a project which aims to map the development of the human brain from birth to age 18 through Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI).

The Atlas, which will contain information on the brain from over five hundred children, will also be available on the Internet for other researchers to use.

The project involves McGill researchers Dr. Bruce Pike and Dr. Tomas Paus, both neuroscientists at the MNI, and Dr. Alan Evans, the project's lead investigator and a researcher at the MNI's McConnell Brain Imaging Centre. "The National Institutes of Health determined that we have a unique means of analysing data on such a large scale," says Dr. Evans. "This contract is a recognition of the MNI's world-wide leadership in the neurosciences."

The project will include data collected by seven American research centres, including the Children's Hospital in Boston, the University of California at Los Angeles, and the University of California at Irvine. The project's duration will last at least seven years, with the possibility that its scope will be enlarged to include the brain development of young adults.

Learn more about the Montreal Neurological Institute by visiting their web site at http://www.mcgill.ca/mni/.