Brown Receives $100 Million Gift to Further Research of Brain & Nerve Disorders

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Brown Receives $100 Million Gift to Further Research of Brain & Nerve Disorders

PHOTO: Brown University
Brown University has received a $100 million gift for its brain science institute from alumnus Robert and Nancy Carney to quicken the pace of scientific discovery and help find cures for diseases such as ALS and Alzheimers.

The gift ranks as one of the three single biggest gifts in school history.

Carney graduated in Brown’s undergraduate class of 1961, and is founder and chairman of Vacation Publications Inc.

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Previously, he was a founder of Jet Capital Corp., a financial advisory firm, and Texas Air Corp., which owned Continental Airlines and several other airlines.

Nancy Doerr Carney is a former television news producer.

The gift changes the name of the Brown Institute for Brain Science to the Robert J. and Nancy D. Carney Institute for Brain Science.

“Brown has meant so much to Nancy and me. We feel extremely fortunate to be able to help expand Brown’s brain institute and carry forward such a significant priority for the University," Carney said.

Carney Institute for Brain Science

Brown’s brain science institute consists of 45 labs and 130 affiliated professors in departments that range from neurology and neurosurgery across campus.

The gift will allow the Carney Institute to speed up hiring of leading faculty and postdoctoral scholars in fields related to brain science, supply seed funding for high-impact new research, and also fund essential new equipment and infrastructure in technology-intensive areas of exploration.

Core areas of research at the institute include work on brain-computer interfaces to aid patients with spinal injury and paralysis; innovative advances in computational neuroscience to address behavior and mood disorders; and research into mechanisms of cell death as part of efforts to identify therapies for neurodegenerative diseases that include amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Alzheimer’s.

“This extraordinarily generous gift will give Brown the resources to be at the forefront of this drive for new knowledge and therapies. We know that discoveries in brain science in the years to come will dramatically reshape human capabilities, and Brown will be a leader in this critical endeavor," said Brown President Christina Paxson. 


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