Get Newsletter
Alzheimer Research Forum - Networking for a Cure Alzheimer Research Forum - Networking for a CureAlzheimer Research Forum - Networking for a Cure
  
What's New HomeContact UsHow to CiteGet NewsletterBecome a MemberLogin          
Papers of the Week
Current Papers
ARF Recommends
Milestone Papers
Search All Papers
Search Comments
News
Research News
Drug News
Conference News
Research
AD Hypotheses
  AlzSWAN
  Current Hypotheses
  Hypothesis Factory
Forums
  Live Discussions
  Virtual Conferences
  Interviews
Enabling Technologies
  Workshops
  Research Tools
Compendia
  AlzGene
  AlzRisk
  Antibodies
  Biomarkers
  Mutations
  Protocols
  Research Models
  Video Gallery
Resources
  Bulletin Boards
  Conference Calendar
  Grants
  Jobs
Early-Onset Familial AD
Overview
Diagnosis/Genetics
Research
News
Profiles
Clinics
Drug Development
Companies
Tutorial
Drugs in Clinical Trials
Disease Management
About Alzheimer's
  FAQs
Diagnosis
  Clinical Guidelines
  Tests
  Brain Banks
Treatment
  Drugs and Therapies
Caregiving
  Patient Care
  Support Directory
  AD Experiences
Community
Member Directory
Researcher Profiles
Institutes and Labs
About the Site
Mission
ARF Team
ARF Awards
Advisory Board
Sponsors
Partnerships
Fan Mail
Support Us
Return to Top
Home: News
News
News Search  
A Virtual Toast to Thal, Nitsch, and Stanley on Their Awards
9 March 2004. The Alzheimer Research Forum congratulates three esteemed scientists, and occasional contributors to this website, on the awards they won this past week. Leon Thal of the University of California, San Diego, and Roger Nitsch of Zurich University share the $100,000 Potamkin Prize for Research in Pick's, Alzheimer's and Related Diseases, the premier award in the U.S. for clinical or basic research on Alzheimer’s and related dementias. Eugene Stanley, at Boston University, received the prestigious Boltzman Award, which is presented once every three years by the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics.

Leon Thal chairs the department of neurosciences and directs the Alzheimer Disease Research Center at UCSD. In recent years, he has become best known for also leading the Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative Study, a national consortium of 80 centers which carry out joint clinical trials of experimental therapies in AD. For more information on Thal’s numerous accomplishments in the development of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors, vitamin E, estrogen replacement therapy, as well as many other AD clinical methods and therapy development, see UCSD newsletter.

Roger Nitsch is a professor at Zurich’s Neuro Science Center. He has made numerous contributions to the molecular pathophysiology of AD, including its genetics and markers. His work in creating combined Aβ/tau transgenic mice, and in analyzing the antibody and clinical responses to experimental immunotherapy (see ARF related news story) was widely discussed in the field. The Potamkin award will be presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology on April 27, 2004, in San Francisco. For more information about previous Potamkin Prize winners, see .pdf. Last year’s Potamkin prize honored Dave Holtzman and Ashley Bush (see ARF related news story).


A 3D rendered picture of a sequence of confocal microscope images of an amyloid plaque from the human brain tissue. This image originally appeared in Cruz et al., 1997.

Eugene Stanley directs the Center for Polymer Studies at Boston University. The Boltzman award honors outstanding achievement in statistical physics, and the presentation this year will take place this July in Bangalore, India. According to the Institute of Scientific Information, Stanley consistently appears on the list of the world’s most cited physicists. He is known for his work on the understanding of disordered systems, phase transitions, branched polymers, percolation, and aggregation. Alzheimer’s scientists have taken note of his work applying statistical physics to the nature of amyloid aggregation, and attentive investors may have heard about his statistical models of how stock market fluctuations mimic those found in physical phenomena such as earthquakes and network dynamics. The Alzheimer Research Forum has previously summarized some of Stanley’s work in Alzheimer disease (see ARF related news story, ARF news story).…Gabrielle Strobel, adapted from press releases.

 
  Submit a Comment on this News Article
Cast your vote and/or make a comment on this news article. 

If you already are a member, please login.
Not sure if you are a member? Search our member database.

*First Name  
*Last Name  
Country or Territory:
*Login Email Address  
*Password    Minimum of 8 characters
*Confirm Password  
Stay signed in?  

Comment:

(If coauthors exist for this comment, please enter their names and email addresses at the end of the comment.)

References:


*Enter the verification code you see in the picture below:


This helps Alzforum prevent automated registrations.

Terms and Conditions of Use:Printable Version

By clicking on the 'I accept' below, you are agreeing to the Terms and Conditions of Use above.
Print this page
Email this page
Alzforum News
Papers of the Week
Text size
Share & Bookmark
ADNI Related Links
ADNI Data at LONI
ADNI Information
DIAN
Foundation for the NIH
AddNeuroMed
neuGRID
Desperately

Antibodies
Cell Lines
Collaborators
Papers
Research Participants
Copyright © 1996-2013 Alzheimer Research Forum Terms of Use How to Cite Privacy Policy Disclaimer Disclosure Copyright
wma logoadadad