Research | Baycrest

Research

  • Brain Power Conference

    Brain Power Conference

    Register for the first annual Brain Power Conference at the Royal Conservatory in Toronto.

    May 3-4, 2012

     

  • BRAVO

    BRAVO

    Participate in Baycrest Research About Volunteering among Older Adults (BRAVO)

     

  • Pure, Applied

    How does the brain age well?

    Scientists at the Rotman Research Institute (RRI) aim to understand and measure disorders of the brain in aging.

    The Kunin-Lunenfeld Applied and Evaluative Research Unit (KLAERU) scientists evaluate and apply research to clinical care.

  • Research Annual Report 2010-2011

    Imagine a discovery

    That enhances our brains as we age.

    That detects and prevents the onset of dementia.

    The next generation of neuroscience Research at Baycrest

  • Innovate and Transform

    Bridging scientific results and healthcare products

    Commercializing Baycrest's world-class research to drive social and economic benefit.

     

    Centre for Brain Fitness

     

News

  • A 'walk in the park' gives mental boost to people with depression

    Dr. Marc Berman, post-doctoral fellow at Baycrest’s Rotman Research Institute, is the lead author of one of the first studies to examine the effect of nature walks on cognition and mood in people with major depression. Researchers in Canada and the U.S. have found promising evidence that a walk in the park may provide some cognitive benefits. ... Read More >>

Events

Highlights

See all publications

Discovering the brain mechanism of binding: study

Scientists at the Rotman Research Institute, Bernhard Ross, Takahiro Miyazaki and Takako Fujioka discovered the brain network, through which sound elements are combined into meaningful information. Using magnetoencephalography they demonstrated for the first time in humans that fast oscillations play a main role for binding of information, which had been suggested theoretically for a long time. The study, published in the European Journal of Neuroscience, demonstrates also how acoustical noise affects comprehension of the meaning of sound. The results of the study provide important tools for understanding the speech communication deficits in aging.

A neural information super-highway: study

Researchers—Bratislav Mišić,  Vasily Vakorin, Natasha Kovačević, Tomáš Paus,and Randy McIntosh—from Baycrest's Rotman Research Institute have developed a novel technique to measure neural activity in the brain by partitioning the activity into units of information. The study, published in PLoS Computational Biology, demonstrates how telecommunication systems can be modeled to study information flow in the brain networks. Read the Globe and Mail story.

Tapping onto early language acquisition processes may help people with dense amnesia: study

Scientists Asaf Gilboa and Morris Moscovitch from Baycrest’s Rotman Research Institute, University of Toronto, and Tali Sharon from Haifa University, utilized "fast mapping" with patients with dense amnesia to help them learn novel names of fruits and animals such as mangosteen and numbat.

The study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS), contradicts current models of brain systems, which suggest the hippocampus is always required for acquiring new information. Although preliminary, the study may help devise novel behavioral interventions for people with memory impairments.

Dr. Tiffany Chow on Alzheimer's

Dr. Randy McIntosh on the Virtual Brain

Dr. Fergus Craik on the power of memory

Dr. Brian Levine on the frontal lobes