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The SWC is part of University College London (UCL), but sits outside of the faculty structure. [1] It is funded by the Gatsby Charitable Foundation [2] and Wellcome. [3] Founded in 2016, [4] the Centre comprises 12 labs whose research feeds into the mission of understanding how the brain generates behaviour. [5]
The Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging, formerly the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging [1] at University College London (incorporating the Leopold Muller Functional Imaging Laboratory and the Wellcome Department of Imaging Neuroscience) is an interdisciplinary centre for neuroimaging research based in London, United Kingdom.
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. [7] It forms a key part of UCL Neuroscience. [3]
UCL Neuroscience is a research domain that encompasses the breadth of neuroscience research activity across University College London's (UCL) School of Life and Medical Sciences. The domain was established in January 2008, to coordinate neuroscience activity across the many UCL departments and institutes in which neuroscience research takes place.
The UCL Ear Institute is an academic department of the Faculty of Brain Sciences of University College London (UCL) located in Gray's Inn Road in the Bloomsbury district of Central London, England, previously next to the Royal National Throat, Nose and Ear Hospital, the UK's largest ear, nose and throat hospital until it closed in 2019.
The UCL Division of Psychology and Language Sciences [1] is a Division within the Faculty of Brain Sciences [2] of University College London (UCL) [3] and is located in London, United Kingdom. [4] The Division offers teaching and training and undertakes research in psychology and communication and allied clinical and basic science. [ 5 ]
The hospital was founded by Johanna Chandler as the National Hospital for the Paralysed and Epileptic at Queen Square in 1859. [2] The hospital was completely rebuilt in the early 1880s: the East Wing was re-opened by Princess Helena in 1881 and the West Wing was re-opened by the Prince of Wales in 1885. [2]
Alan J. Thompson is Dean of the Faculty of Brain Sciences [2] at UCL; Pro-Provost for London [3] at UCL; Garfield Weston Professor of Clinical Neurology and Neurorehabilitation [4] at the UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology.