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Dr. Milner, originally from England, began her doctoral research in the 1950's with Dr. Donald Hebb in the Department of Psychology at McGill University. With Dr. Hebb's encouragement, she came to the MNI to work with Dr. Wilder Penfield. Her careful empirical work with patients helped Dr. Penfield define functional areas of the brain, important information for a neurosurgeon. Over several decades, Dr. Milner studied HM, a post-surgical patient made famous by her studies, and identified multiple memory systems by teasing out his cognitive capabilities and deficits. While HM was unable to remember recent events, he was able to learn new motor tasks. In all their years of association, HM never remembered from one time to another that he had met Dr. Milner nor that he had practiced a drawing skill under her direction. Designing a series of subtle experiments for HM, Dr. Milner was able to demonstrate two different memory systems. As evidence of her scientific skill and insight, it would be 25 years before other scientists developed experimental models of animal behaviour to study episodic and procedural memory systems.
Currently, Dr. Milner uses non-invasive brain imaging technology to study the functional specialization in the right and left brain hemispheres, and is particularly interested in the role of the right hemisphere in remembering the location of objects. Active in research and teaching, Dr. Milner is asked frequently to speak at scientific meetings and at universities throughout North America. The Gairdner Awards (www.gairdner.org) were established by Toronto businessman James Gairdner to honour outstanding achievement in medical science. Since their inception in 1959, 274 scientists have received the award and 64 have gone on the win a Nobel prize. The 2005 awardees were recently announced at a Toronto luncheon and will receive their awards and $30,000 cash prizes at a gala dinner in October. Dr. Milner and Dr. Endel Tulving, from the University of Toronto, are among the six prominent scientists honoured with the award this year.
The Montreal Neurological Institute (www.mni.mcgill.ca) is a
McGill University (www.mcgill.ca) research and teaching institute,
dedicated to the study of the nervous system and neurological
diseases. Founded in 1934 by the renowned Dr. Wilder Penfield, the
MNI is one of the world's largest institutes of its kind. MNI
researchers are world leaders in cellular and molecular
neuroscience, brain imaging, cognitive neuroscience and the study
and treatment of epilepsy, multiple sclerosis and neuromuscular
disorders. The MNI, with its clinical partner, the Montreal
Neurological Hospital (MNH), part of the McGill University Health
Centre (www.muhc.ca), continues to integrate research, patient care
and training, and is recognized as one of the premier neuroscience
centres in the world. Already well known for its McConnell Brain
Imaging Centre, the MNI will expand its brain imaging research in
the next several years through a $28 million award from the Canada
Foundation for Innovation, made in partnership with the government
of Quebec. There will also be further development of MNI
initiatives in multiple sclerosis, optical imaging and
nano-neuroscience.
For further information or to arrange to interview with Dr. Milner, please contact:
Dr. Sandra McPherson
Montreal Neurological Institute
Tel: (514) 398-1902
Fax: (514) 398-8072
Email: sandra.mcpherson@mcgill.ca
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