UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology
The UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology is an institute within the Faculty of Brain Sciences of University College London and is located in London, United Kingdom. Together with the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, an adjacent facility with which it cooperates closely, the institute forms a major centre for teaching, training and research in neurology and allied clinical and basic neurosciences.
The institute has a staff of around 710 and 500 graduate students, an annual turnover of £81million and occupies around 12,000 sq m of laboratory and office space. Four of the 12 most highly cited authors in neuroscience and behaviour in the world are currently based at the institute. The institute conducts research into a wide range of neurological diseases, including movement disorders, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy, brain cancer, stroke and brain injury, muscle and nerve disorders, cognitive dysfunction and dementia. It forms a key part of UCL Neuroscience.
History
The Institute of Neurology was established in 1950. It merged with UCL in 1997, becoming the UCL Institute of Neurology. The institute is centred at Queen Square House, a concrete tower in the north-east corner of Queen Square, London that opened in 1971. Due to expansion, some of the institute's departments and activities are now based in numerous locations in Queen Square and surrounding parts of Bloomsbury. The UCL Institute of Neurology was rebranded to UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology in September, 2018.Departments
The institute currently holds 578 active research projects, totalling £262m. Annual turnover is £80million. In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise almost 100 staff were submitted for evaluation and 70% of research was deemed to be internationally competitive or world leading. Submitted papers received an average citation rate of 40 per paper.The most recent research assessment exercise, REF2014, showed that the institute, as part of the Faculty of Brain Sciences, is the first rated UK institution for neuroscience research output
The institute is home to the following research departments and centres
- Department of Brain Repair & Rehabilitation
- Department of Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy
- Department of Clinical and Movement Neurosciences
- *Ataxia Centre
- *Movement Disorders Centre
- *Queen Square Brain Bank
- *Reta Lila Weston Institute
- *Sara Koe PSP Centre
- *Unit of Functional Neurosurgery
- Department of Neurodegenerative Disease
- *Dementia Research Centre
- *Huntington's Disease Centre
- Department of Neuroinflammation
- *Queen Square Multiple Sclerosis Centre
- Department of Neuromuscular Disease
- *MRC Centre for Neuromuscular Diseases
- *Alzheimer's Research UK Drug Discovery Institute
- UK Dementia Research Institute at UCL
- Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging
Notable research findings
In November 2002, a team of researchers at the institute led by Professor John Collinge published the results of a study which showed that the number of cases of CJD caused by the consumption of BSE-infected beef may have been higher than previously calculated and that BSE, in addition to causing variant CJD, may also have caused some cases of "sporadic" CJD.In February 2004, a team of researchers at the institute led by Tania Singer published research showing that it is possible for one human to feel another's pain and that the same regions of the brain are activated in the empathizer and the empathisee. In July 2005, a team of researchers at the institute led by Davina Bristow published the results of research funded by the Wellcome Trust in Current Biology which demonstrated that parts of the human brain are temporarily "switched off" when blinking.
In September 2005, a team of researchers at the institute led by Victor Tybulewicz at the National Institute for Medical Research and Professor Elizabeth Fisher from the institute published the results of a study in which they had been able to introduce most of a human chromosome into mice, producing the most successful recreation of Down's syndrome to date.
In August 2007, a team of researchers at the institute led by Henrik Ehrsson published research in Science which was the first to describe how it is possible to use cameras to trick the human brain into thinking that a person is elsewhere in a room than they really are.
In February 2011, a team of researchers at the institute led by Nick Wood published the results of a genetic study which had identified five new genes linked to Parkinson's disease.
In September 2015, Prof Sarah Tabrizi began the first human trial of a 'gene silencing' antisense oligonucleotide drug, IONIS-HTTRx, for the neurodegenerative disease Huntington's disease at the institute's Leonard Wolfson Experimental Neurology Centre.
Notable researchers
Nobel Laureates
- James Rothman
Fellows of the Royal Society
- Gillian Bates
- John Collinge
- Raymond Dolan
- John Hardy
- Dimitri Kullmann
- Geoffrey Raisman
- Elizabeth Warrington
Fellows of the Academy of Medical Sciences
- W. Ian McDonald
- John S. Duncan
- Elizabeth Fisher
- Nick Fox
- Dimitri Kullmann
- Andrew Lees
- Roger Lemon
- David Miller
- Cathy Price
- Martin Rossor
- John Rothwell
- Alan Thompson
- Sarah Tabrizi
Members of Academia Europaea
- Dimitri Kullmann
- James Rothman
- Dmitri Rusakov
Other notable researchers
- Michael Hanna
- Ley Sander
- Edward Wild
Education
PhD programmes
- Three- and four-year PhD programmes
Masters programmes
- MSc Clinical Neurology via Distance Learning
- MSc/MRes in Advanced Neuroimaging
- Brain and Mind Sciences: DualMasters
- MSc Clinical Neuroscience
- MSc Clinical Neurology
- MSc Dementia: Causes, Treatments and Research
- MSc/MRes Neuromuscular Disease
- MSc/MRes Stroke Medicine
- MRes in Translational Neuroscience
Diploma programmes
- Postgraduate Diploma]/PGCert in Clinical Neurology
- Postgraduate Diploma]/PGCert Neuromuscular Disease
- Postgraduate Diploma]/PGCert Stroke Medicine
- Postgraduate Diploma in Clinical Neurology via Distance Learning
Library
Archives
The archives hold numerous collections including:- 1500 bound volumes of NHNN case notes from 1863 to 1946, of which William Richard Gowers' have been digitised.
- Administrative records for the NHNN from 1859 to 1948, of which the Annual Reports and Board of Management minutes from 1859 to 1948 have been digitised.
- Employment records of NHNN staff from 1860 to 1946, of which medical staff records have been digitised.
- Deeds, plans, and insurance documents, of which the NHNN's plans have been digitised.
- Approximately 3000 photographs, most of which have been digitised.
- 1900+ films documenting patient consultations.
- Over 250 volumes of Maida Vale Hospital case notes from 1906 to 1937.
- Unpublished papers and lectures, including William Richard Gowers postgraduate lectures, John Hughlings Jackson's unpublished papers discovered in 2003, and the Jubilee Scrapbook, which contains NHNN items from 1908 to 1910.