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The source of this article is Israel21c: http://tinyurl.com/d4seh

Using the secrets of the brain to promote scientific cooperation
By David Brinn   July 03, 2005


There wasn't any one particular reason why some of the world's most 
respected brain researchers gathered last week in a Jerusalem conference 
center - there were lots of them!

According to Rutgers University Professor Mark Gluck - who, along with 
world renown Hebrew University Professor Haggai Bergman, organized the two 
day conference focusing on interdisciplinary approaches to understanding 
Parkinson's disease - scientific, social and political motives were among 
those behind the gathering.

"Scientifically, we brought together people from all over the world - from 
the US, Europe and Israel - who are working on various aspects of 
Parkinson's disease research and on addiction - the two share common 
neuropathways," Gluck told ISRAEL21c during a lunch break at the Mishkenot 
Sha'anim Conference Center in the Yemin Moshe neighborhood of Jerusalem. 
"Different researchers in different countries are working on the problems 
from various perspectives - like computer modeling.

"There's a specific scientific reason for holding the conference in Israel 
- it's a world leader in the life sciences and information technology - and 
the conference is a confluence of these two. Particularly, we decided to 
hold the conference at Hebrew University because it's a leading center in 
this field and has a center of neurocomputation.

"My co-director - Prof Bergman - invented deep brain stimulation for 
Parkinson's patients - a process that stimulates parts of the brain in 
order to control motor tremors. So Israel's a natural place to hold the 
conference."

Parkinson's is a progressive disease of the nervous system that affects an 
estimated 1.2 million people in the United States and Canada. Symptoms 
include tremors, body rigidity and problems in movement. Former boxing 
champion Muhammad Ali, actor Michael J. Fox and former Attorney General 
Janet Reno are among prominent victims of Parkinson's.

Bergman, working in the late 1980s with a Parkinson's monkey model, 
discovered a group of cells located deep in the brain called the 
sub-thalamic nucleus. When Parkinson's was present, he discovered, these 
cells were overactive.

The question he strove to answer was: was the Parkinson's disease causing 
the cells to be overactive, or was the overactivity causing Parkinson's? To 
find out, Bergman injected a chemical into the brain to kill the cells, and 
he discovered that the Parkinson's symptoms abated.

His research was published in 1990, and created the basic methodology for a 
group of neurosurgeons in Grenoble, France, in 1993, to first implant an 
electrode deep inside the brain of a human patient with Parkinson's 
disease. The electrode triggered an electric impulse which provided deep 
brain stimulation, and 'switched off' the overactive cells, dramatically 
decreasing the level Parkinson's-induced involuntary movement.

Following the success of the operation in Europe, the next centers to 
attempt this operation were in the United States and Canada. In 2001, when 
the procedure gained FDA approval, the number of hospitals in the United 
States performing the operation mushroomed.

"In computational neuroscience, we're clearly one of the world leaders," 
Bergman told ISRAEL21c. "Our lab is coming out with new research all the 
time. My group of 10 graduate students are having quite a good impact and 
publishing in important journals. There aren't many American labs that are 
doing as well."

Beyond science, the next reason Bergman and Gluck worked for three years to 
make last week's conference - entitled 'Basal Ganglia, Dopamine, and 
Learning: Integrating Computational and Clinical Perspectives ' - become a 
reality, was the ever-present threat of a scientific boycott on Israel by 
European colleagues.

"I found it really upsetting - an attack on my tribe twice over - fellow 
Jews and fellow scientists," said Gluck. "And this was something that I 
could do beyond being upset and annoyed. It's very rare to find an 
international issue that somebody can actually have a voice in and affect 
change. I thought that bringing leading scientists to Israel and 
publicizing the fact was the best way to show that the most important 
researchers are not being influenced by the boycott - and actually the 
opposite was true: It was resulting in more and more collaborations."

Professor Jean Saint-Cyr of the University of Toronto - who lectured the 
100 attendees about the connection between pathological gambling and 
Parkinson's patient - called the boycott immoral.

"I'm fundamentally opposed to it, it's not as if scientists are militants 
and adding their voices to any political problems in the area. I think that 
science should be above all that. Being here is a signal that we don't 
agree with the boycott ? we're voting with our feet," he said.

If those weren't enough, another goal of the conference was to foster 
three-way ties between the American and Israeli researchers and their 
Palestinian counterparts. Al-Quds University in east Jerusalem was 
originally one of the co-hosts of the conference along with Hebrew 
University, but pressure on the Palestinian scientists caused them to pare 
down their participation.

"I was in charge of reaching out to our Palestinian colleagues," explained 
Bergman. "I went to Al-Quds three or four times, and until two weeks ago, 
everything was fine. Recently, however, they felt it was beyond their 
ability to bring a group of scientists to the conference. However, the dean 
of medical school and head of the neurology department came for some 
sessions and met some of the people here.

"It's good that they were introduced to our colleagues from the US like Mark.
Then the next time, the direct connection can be with them, and there won't 
be as much pressure on them to deal directly with us. It was a first step."

According to Gluck - co-director of the Rutgers Memory Disorders Project - 
collaboration between Israeli and Palestinian scientists is desirable for 
both sides, and he's glad to act as a mediator.

"I'm not naïve enough to believe that if scientists talk to each other that 
it will lead directly to a resolution of the conflict. But it does create 
an atmosphere of communications - in topics that are not controversial. You 
don't start talking about the hardest things first, but rather find areas 
of common interests," he said.

"For the Palestinians, Israel could be a fabulous neighbor. In terms of 
health care advances, Israel is a leader, and regional cooperation would 
enable that knowledge to filter to its neighbors."

The day following the conference, the 44-year-old Gluck was headed to 
Al-Quds for meetings with colleagues there to discuss collaborative research.

"We're trying to design some form of Parkinson's research that can be done 
collaboratively with us, Hebrew University and Al Quds," he said, 
explaining that at this stage, it would be easier for the Palestinian 
scientists to collaborate with Israelis indirectly through American 
involvement.

The energetic Gluck is not stopping there. The inaugural conference also 
planted the seeds for a new Rutgers/Israel exchange program. The 
Rutgers-Israel Biomedical Research and Education Exchange is expected to 
grow into a comprehensive exchange program for study and collaborative 
research - bringing Rutgers students and faculty to Israel and Israeli 
scientists and students to Rutgers.

"The program will take US undergraduates interested in biomed research and 
bring them to Israeli university labs. They'll grow professionally, but in 
addition, they'll get the Israel experience, see the country for themselves 
and get a new perspective," said Gluck.

"From what they read in the newspapers, most students know only about the 
occasional violence and political struggles, but few are aware that Israel 
is an amazing engine of scientific and medical innovation and progress. By 
sending them over to do research in Israeli labs, I think we can both 
increase US-Israeli links and collaboration in biomedical research, as well 
as spread the good news and the strengths of Israel like its amazing 21st 
century cutting edge research labs and the many ways in which Israeli 
scientists and doctor are helping to improve healthcare worldwide with 
their discoveries and innovations."

The University of Toronto's Saint-Cyr agrees that those interested in 
neuroscience have much to learn from their Israeli colleagues.

"I've been working in neuroscience all my life and have met many Israeli 
scientists, and they've always been top-notch. The educational facilities 
here are as good as they get anyplace in the world. In Canada, we've had 
many positive collaborations with Israeli scientists." 

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