Research will be conducted on such topics as tracking memory tasks during neurosurgery to connect changes in mental activity with alterations in brain chemistry. Other work will focus on exploring consciousness under hypnosis to learn how some brain activities are associated with consciousness and others are not. How infants learn complex behaviors will be analyzed by studying the way they mirror adults, and by examining ways in which brain adaptation to the environment during childhood leads to development of abstract concepts. The 12 projects were selected from among 43 applications. Those funded were among the most creative programs for cutting edge research to bridge the mind/brain gap.
Traditionally, neuroscientists have studied the operation of the brain, while cognitive scientists and psychologists have focused on mental functions. Connecting the intellectual activities of these two impressive groups in San Diego is the ambitious goal of the KIBM.
"It was exciting to review these applications", said Jeffrey Elman, Co-Director of the Institute. "These are high-risk, high-payoff ventures -- the kind of research that is not well supported by conventional sources of support for research." Proposals were received from investigators at The Salk Institute, The Scripps Research Institute and The Neurosciences Institute in addition to researchers at UCSD. Within UCSD the applicant pool was spread across the School of Medicine, the Division of Social Sciences and the Division of Biological Sciences.
Projects selected for funding and their principal investigators are listed below, with the UCSD academic department or name of other institution indicated:
"It is wonderful to see the creativity of our colleagues in these innovative proposals," noted Nicholas Spitzer, Institute Co-director. "The potential for high impact work is impressive. These efforts will lead to changes in the way we understand the interactions between the brain and the mind. The financial support comes at a critical stage in the research projects -- enabling people to start investigative programs that they would otherwise be unable to launch," added Spitzer.
The 12 grants averaged $30,000 each. The Kavli Institute for Brain and Mind was inaugurated in November, 2004, following its establishment with a $7.5 million gift from physicist Fred Kavli and the Kavli Foundation. It has become quickly integrated into the research environment of San Diego with a commitment to inter-disciplinary research.

