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Barbara Kram, Editor | October 15, 2008
Funds for innovative
imaging technology
The National Center for Research Resources (NCRR), a part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), will provide up to an estimated $11 million over the next five years to create two new Biomedical Technology Research Centers (BTRCs) that will provide researchers nationwide with access to specialized research tools, training and state-of-the-art equipment. One center will develop innovative imaging techniques designed specifically to better diagnose and treat diseases, such as Alzheimer's, where the nervous system progressively deteriorates. A second center will create cutting-edge software for identifying and analyzing sets of interacting proteins that are important in a wide range of diseases, such as cancer.
Each center creates critical and often unique technology to apply to a broad range of basic, clinical, and translational research. Serving as test beds for solving complex biomedical research problems, BTRC research projects combine the expertise of multidisciplinary technical and biomedical experts both within the center and through collaborative partnerships. These efforts result in innovative solutions to today's health challenges, which are then actively disseminated to promote rapid adoption and achieve the broadest possible impact.
"At these centers, researchers nationwide can gain access to advanced instrumentation, software, and support for a wide range of biomedical research problems," said NCRR Director Barbara Alving, M.D. "Through unique collaborations with physical, computational, and biological scientists, engineers, and clinical investigators, researchers at these centers are collectively advancing technology and its application to disease."

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The new centers are being established at the Northern California Institute for Research and Education Inc. in San Francisco and at the University of California, San Diego.
The Northern California Institute for Research and Education Inc. in San Francisco will receive a five-year award up to an estimated $6.04 million to develop a center for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of neurodegenerative disorders. This BTRC will develop innovative and improved MRI techniques for clinicians to better understand, detect, diagnose, and treat diseases, such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease. A vital new resource for a rapidly aging population, the new center represents a continued collaborative effort among MRI physicists, computer scientists, and clinical investigators to provide the scientific community with a centralized source for the latest imaging tools, service, and training focused solely on neurodegenerative diseases.