Laureate Institute for Brain Research
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"Racism and Science: A Call for Action" by Martin P. Paulus, M.D.

6/19/2020

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Over the past weeks, we have experienced repeated events that are painful to watch, and that cannot be condoned with silence. It is all too obvious that people who look like me hurt people who do not look like me with the tacit assumption that there is no retribution. These events make me feel ashamed and guilty, feelings that are painful to be with and that my brain would prefer to suppress. These events have made me aware that there are many people who are struggling on a daily basis and are facing bodily harm, oppression, injustice, and disrespect. Violence against Black people has brought this struggle in focus, but these events are not limited to Blacks alone. There is an unfortunate history of violence and injustice against American Indian, Asian American, Hispanic American, and other minorities. Moreover, this struggle extends to one’s sexual orientations or one’s belief systems in contrast with the mainstream. One common element is the intolerance of what is different and the anger, aggression, and hate that emerges from this intolerance.
 
In science, we aim to observe, experiment, and draw conclusions from the facts.  However, science does not happen in a vacuum. It is done by people and – when it involves the human condition – it focuses on people. We have to ask ourselves, have the events that occurred on our streets also occurred in more subtle ways in our laboratories? Have people that look like me hurt people that do not look like me? The answer is yes, and this admission demands further evaluation. First, given certain circumstances, we are all capable of biased or racist thoughts, feelings, and actions. This is the source of pain experienced by those who see people of their group hurting those that are not part of their group. Second, we have to make an ongoing effort to openly work with these sentiments and to arrive at choices that will reduce the chance that we will hurt people who are different from us in the future. Third, we have to provide an opportunity for those who are the target of these injustices.  However, that also means we have to learn about their struggle, understand the particulars of the pain they are experiencing, and develop paths that will reduce those painful events within the context of science in the future. Fourth, curiosity and understanding have to win over ignorance and intolerance. We need to learn about our differences, understand how they influence our feelings, thoughts, and actions, and develop better explanations of the human conditions that we are interested in.
 
Outrage and anger over the events on our streets, laboratories, and other public or private places are not enough. It may even be a cage that will not allow us to understand why we are inflicting pain on others and how this increases all human suffering. Instead, open engagement with respect, interest, and love will help to develop the understanding that can be used to build new systems to reduce the pain of those in the minority. The situation is serious and calls for urgent and sustained engagement in finding new solutions. Scientists are problem solvers; we need to be thinking about our contribution to finding solutions to overcoming intolerance, anger, and aggression on the one hand and discover ways of healing the pain of those that have been the target of racism. We must work to build each other up and empower minorities in science rather than tearing people down.
 
To that end, we have started a workgroup that consists of individuals who work at LIBR to enhance the recognition that race and ethnicity play an important role to improve our scientific approach to solving mental health problems:
 
Aim 1: Increase the consideration of race/ethnicity when developing research questions, analysis plans, and assessments (e.g., including biological, sociocultural, economic variables).
  • Goals:
    • Increase investigator and staff understanding and comfort level with research on race and ethnicity concerning neuroscience and mental/physical health 
    • Increase understanding and sensitivity to issues of race/ethnicity in the conduct of research.
  • Actions: 
    • Establish a “Diversity in Mental Health and Neuroscience Research” lecture series for which we invite experts in related areas of research to present their work.
    • Establish a training seminar or reading group for all LIBR staff/faculty concerning issues of culture and diversity in the conduct of research 
    • Establish a community advisory board with standing and/or rotating membership to inform how we can make our research more relevant to individuals from diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds.
 
Aim 2: Increase the representation of under-represented minorities in the neuroscience and mental health research workforce.
  • Goals:
    • Increase representation of researchers from under-represented minorities on our invited speaker lineup (WKW, Brown bags, Visiting Scientists).
    • Increase recruitment of under-represented minorities at all levels of employment and training (research assistants, students, staff scientists, investigators).
  • Actions:
    • Ensure that advertisements for new positions are sent to universities and organizations with diverse students/members 
    • Establish Summer research opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students from underrepresented minorities. 
 
Aim 3: Enhance outreach efforts to and partnership with communities and organizations with diverse race/ethnicity representation.
  • Goals:
    • Increase our understanding of how we can optimize our research to better answer questions of relevance to individuals from diverse race/ethnicity backgrounds.
    • Increase recruitment of participants from diverse race/ethnicity backgrounds.
  • Actions:
    • Organize regular opportunities for LIBR employees to volunteer together with Tulsa communities and organizations. 
    • Identify organizations and clinics that we can partner with to support the recruitment of participants from diverse race/ethnicity backgrounds. 
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LIBR Welcomes New President and Scientific Director: Martin Paulus, M.D.

5/29/2014

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The Laureate Institute for Brain Research is pleased to announce a new era of leadership under the direction of Dr. Martin Paulus, President and Scientific Director of LIBR.

Dr. Paulus was formerly a Professor of Psychiatry at the University of California-San Diego and Director of Telemental Health at the San Diego Veteran’s Affairs Medical Center.

“I am honored and excited to be the new Director and President of the Laureate Institute for Brain Research (LIBR).  The institute offers a unique opportunity to bring cutting edge neuroscience and neuroimaging to improve clinical care of patients with psychiatric disorders.  My goal is to help the investigators to achieve prominence in their respective research fields and to make the results of their research findings matter for daily clinical care.  To this end, we will soon launch an unprecedented study, called the Tulsa 1000, which aims to answer the question “Can we develop an EKG for the psychiatrist?”  Finally, I am looking forward to working with academic institutions and mental health leaders in the community to make LIBR a valuable resource for Tulsa."

We welcome Dr. Paulus to LIBR and look forward to exciting opportunities in the future as we continue our mission to discover the biological basis of neuropsychiatric disorders.
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LIBR Program has Catalyzed the Formation of a “Quadrangle of Neuroscience Research”

3/24/2010

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The LIBR program catalyzed the formation of a “Quadrangle of Neuroscience Research”, which brought together researchers from Tulsa University (TU), Oklahoma University School of Community Medicine (OUSCM) and Oklahoma Medcial Research Foundation (OMRF), all of which have made commitments of individual and collaborative research activities, into a consortium arrangement. The studies undertaken by this consortium will facilitate the dissection of specific neuropsychiatric diseases and their related genetic or environmental influences that dictate responses to unique pharmacological or psychological therapies. The consortium already has active collaborative relationships with TU’s highly ranked Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, which also includes a new Institute of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology (IBCB), and training relationships for graduate students and post-doctoral fellows with OUSCM, which is expanding as an academic medical center that will emphasize clinical neuroscience as an overarching research activity. Finally, OMRF has become an outstanding biomedical research institution capable of basic science studies of the complex molecular genetics of human disease and animal models of human disease, as well as studies related to drug-design, pharmacokinetics and targeted gene disruption.  
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Laureate on the Forefront of Mental Health Research

2/23/2010

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Since the facility’s opening in 1989, Laureate Psychiatric Clinic and Hospital has been committed to research projects aimed at finding the most effective treatments for patients with mental illnesses – among these include a sponsorship of a World Health Organization study of schizophrenia, participation in the largest worldwide study of depression, and multiple nationwide studies of eating disorders. Monthly, researchers from across the country join local professionals to share breaking advancements in treatment as a part of the William K. Warren Frontiers in Neuroscience conferences.

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Research Opportunity at Laureate Institute for Brain Research, Tulsa, Oklahoma

2/18/2010

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More than one-third of the population will suffer from a neuropsychiatric disorder during their lifetime, which in many cases will result ultimately in death or disability. For some of these conditions, such as those associated with neurodegenerative illness, substantial progress has been made at understanding pathophysiology, yet effective treatments have remained elusive. For other brain-based conditions, such as the major psychiatric disorders, the converse has been true, as treatments that are partly effective have been discovered in the absence of certain knowledge about pathophysiology. Nevertheless, progress in developing more effective treatments for the major psychiatric disorders has reached an impasse, as too little is known about the neurobiology underlying these conditions to guide industry toward targets for drugs and biologicals capable of reducing further the clinical burden of these illnesses.

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