Dornsifes Again Boost Brain Institute
Photo/Steve Cohn
At the USC Brain and Creativity Institute board meeting in October, Dana Dornsife stood up, walked over to her husband David, put her hand on his shoulder and together pledged $1 million to fund the top priorities for the institute.
“The powerful, catalytic effect of the Dornsifes’ generosity has been truly amazing,” said Howard Gillman, dean of USC College. “Very early on, they identified a cause they believed in and have been consistent in their support and commitment ever since. As a result, their extreme generosity has touched an incalculable number of students and scholars. They are exemplary members of the Trojan Family, by any measure.”
The institute director is Antonio Damasio, holder of the College’s David Dornsife Chair in Neuroscience and professor of psychology and neurology. Hanna Damasio is co-director of the Brain and Creativity Institute, director of the Dana and David Dornsife Cognitive Neuroscience Imaging Center, holder of the College’s Dana Dornsife Chair in Neuroscience and professor of psychology and neurology.
“Dana and David’s continued support of the institute will allow us to complete important new research and launch a collaboration with the USC Shoah Foundation Institute,” Antonio Damasio said. “David and Dana understand that in spite of our existing federal and foundation grants, the costs of cutting-edge research requires additional funds to launch new scientific ventures. Their support is invaluable and their leadership is admirable.”
“The pioneering work taking place at the Brain and Creativity Institute will truly distinguish the College in the next few years for both interdisciplinary research and undergraduate and graduate student development,” said David Dornsife, USC trustee, chair of the BCI board, chairman of the board of the Herrick Corp. and Gillig Corp., vice president of the HEDCO Foundation and a 1965 graduate of the USC Marshall School of Business.
One of the research projects is focused on non-verbal communication and in particular on social emotions such as compassion. The goal is to understand as deeply as possible the processes of human empathy.
In partnership with the USC Shoah Foundation Institute for Visual History and Education, the institute will connect these studies to the video testimony of Holocaust survivors. The overall goal of these investigations is to better understand human nature, but the results have practical applications in public policy (e.g., education and management of social conflict) and in the diagnosis and treatment of numerous brain disorders.
In another project, Hanna Damasio and her colleagues are analyzing the brain structure of fraternal and identical twins. The study, carried out in collaboration with Laura Baker of the Department of Psychology, uses state-of-the-art imaging technologies to unravel the developing brain. Two postdoctoral fellows, Mary Helen Immordino-Yang and Christine Vidal, are involved in this research.
The Dornsife gift to the Brain and Creativity Institute continues a long tradition of giving to the neurosciences for the Dornsifes. In 2003, they gave an $8 million lead gift to establish the Dana and David Dornsife Cognitive Neuroscience Imaging Center in the College, which opened in 2004. Dedicated to research, the state-of-the-art center houses a magnetic resonance scanner. The center was critical to the College’s successful recruitment of Antonio and Hanna Damasio.
With a $5 million gift, the Dornsifes established the Dana Dornsife Chair in Neuroscience held by Hanna Damasio and the David Dornsife Chair in Neuroscience held by Antonio Damasio.
At the ceremony for the endowed chairs in 2006, Hanna Damasio described the relationship between the two couples as “perfect symmetry.”
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USA Today reported that USC is helping develop a car windshield display technology that would help drivers see better in inclement weather. The system, which would use an ultraviolet laser to project images on the surface of a windshield, is a collaboration among USC, General Motors and Carnegie Mellon University. ZDNet also featured the research.
The Washington Post, in an Associated Press story, featured a case that was taken on by the USC Gould School’s Post-Conviction Justice Project, involving a woman who defenders believe was wrongfully convicted of murder. Gould School student Jennifer Farrell helped to secure the woman’s release by convincing Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to defer to the parole board’s decision to release her. However, the woman, who had been a legal resident at the time of her arrest, was deported to Mexico after being released. The USC legal team will now ask the governor to pardon the woman so she can visit her children in the United States. The Orange County Register also covered the news.
The Washington Post, in an Associated Press story, quoted USC Shoah Foundation Institute for Visual History and Education Curator Crispin Brooks about the institute’s video archives. The archives, which preserve Holocaust survivor testimony, include 43 records of people who reported seeing Anne Frank in the Bergen Belsen camp, Brooks said.
NBC News’ “NBC Nightly News” featured a project by Donna Spruijt-Metz of the Keck School of USC and Shrikanth Narayanan of the USC Viterbi School that uses text messages and other technology to improve obese Latino teens’ eating and exercise habits. “We’re recruiting technology, which is a part of the obesity problem, to fight obesity,” Spruijt-Metz said. “Cell phones are everywhere. It’s one global device,” Narayanan added.
Central News Agency (Taiwan) reported that USC has signed a memorandum of academic exchange and cooperation with Taiwan’s Ming Chuan University. USC Rossier School Dean Karen Symms Gallagher, who signed the agreement, said that this academic cooperation will allow the two schools to share resources with each other, while enhancing research, teaching quality and competitiveness. USC has been lauded by Time magazine as “University of the Year,” the story noted.
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