U of T and Max Planck Society establish centre to study neural science and technology
The University of Toronto has joined forces with Germany鈥檚 Max Planck Society, one of the world鈥檚 foremost scientific institutions, to establish a centre for the study of neural science and technology.
Hosted by both institutions, the Max Planck-University of Toronto Centre for Neural Science & Technology aims to develop and deploy advanced technologies to study brain circuits for the improvement of human health, while charting new territory in computing.
There are plans to train more than 25 doctoral students over the next five years.
鈥淢ax Planck and U of T are ideally suited to form a close collaboration,鈥 said U of T President Meric Gertler during a virtual launch event this week.
鈥淭his is especially true when we consider our combined talent in brain function and health.鈥
The virtual event was attended by Martin Stratmann, president of the Max Planck Society, St茅phane Dion, Canada鈥檚 ambassador to Germany and special envoy to the European Union and Europe, and Dion鈥檚 diplomatic counterpart, Sabine Sparwasser, Germany鈥檚 ambassador to Canada.
Ted Sargent, U of T鈥檚 vice-president, research and innovation, and strategic initiatives, told attendees the collaboration would give PhD students access to resources and expertise not only at U of T and the Max Planck network, but also at the University Health Network (UHN), the Hospital for Sick Children and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a partnership that鈥檚 going to drive not only cutting-edge research, but also innovative education and research translation in neuroscience and technology,鈥 he said.
(Clockwise from top left) U of T President Meric Gertler, Max Planck Society President Martin Stratmann, German Amassador Sabine Sparwasser and St茅phane Dion, Canada鈥檚 ambassador to Germany and special envoy to the European Union and Europe.
The new centre will divide its research focus into four main streams: micro/nanotechnology for neural interfaces and sensors; understanding the neural basis of memory and behaviour; human neurons, microcircuits and cellular/molecular neurobiology; and neuroscience-inspired artificial intelligence and computing.
The plan calls for PhD students to spend their first year in Toronto and up to three years with a Max Planck partner institute before graduating with a U of T degree. Frequent exchange between the two institutions will take place throughout the students鈥 studies.
Stratmann, who joined the virtual inauguration from Munich, said Max Planck鈥檚 academic partners represent a 鈥渨ho鈥檚 who in science.鈥
鈥淭his new centre is special, I have to say, because it is truly interdisciplinary,鈥 Stratmann said, citing Toronto鈥檚 expertise in neuroscience, neurosurgery and artificial intelligence.
鈥淭he Vector Institute [for Artificial Intelligence], for example, is highly regarded in Europe 鈥 even reaching attention on the federal political level.
鈥淚 have talked many times with (Chancellor) Angela Merkel about the Vector Institute.鈥
Dion and Sparwasser saluted the new partnership, which was inaugurated two days before the 50th anniversary of an agreement solidifying German-Canadian scientific and technological co-operation.
鈥淲hat we see today is a match made in heaven,鈥 said Sparwassser, noting U of T鈥檚 prowess in brain science, computing and other fields, and Max Planck鈥檚 history of success, including 20 Nobel laureates.
Joyce Poon, director of the Max Planck Institute for Microstructure Physics in Halle, Germany, worked with Taufik Valiante, an associate professor in U of T鈥檚 department of surgery in the Temerty Faculty of Medicine and scientist at the Krembil Brain Institute in the University Health Network, to make the Max Planck-U of T Centre a reality.
鈥淚t is another major pillar of the growing neurotechnology 鈥榚cosystem鈥 here at the University of Toronto and participating TAHSN [Toronto Academic Health Science Network] hospitals,鈥 Valiante said.
鈥淚t is also exemplary of the much-needed cross-disciplinary work that needs to be done to advance brain science.鈥
Researchers such as Poon, who specializes in integrated photonic devices and circuits for communications and neurotechnology, bring an engineering background that complements experts such as Valiante, a neurosurgeon and scientist who has researched memory, epilepsy and the biophysical properties of neurons, among other topics.
Valiante said the new Max Planck-U of T Centre鈥檚 creation comes at a key time.
鈥淭here is a great sense of societal urgency given an aging population and the fact that neurological conditions have a greater societal burden than heart disease and cancer combined,鈥 he said.
Illan Kramer, U of T鈥檚 director of international research partnerships, said interdisciplinary and global collaboration with a world-class institution such as the Max Planck Society will allow local researchers to see complex scientific questions in a new light.
鈥淵ou really can see the problem from a 360-degree perspective when you look at it in through an interdisciplinary and international lens,鈥 he said.
Moreover, the agreement creates new opportunities for U of T graduate students to work with top researchers in their fields, giving the university a competitive edge in recruiting promising students.
鈥淚t winds up being an excellent net benefit from a variety of perspectives,鈥 Kramer said.
鈥淣ot only does it help experts do better research, but we get to attract the absolute highest calibre researchers.鈥