Neuroscientist has been awarded a from the Pershing Square Foundation. The Foundation’s announcement said that the prize aims to “change the paradigm of neuroscience research by creating a community of next-frontier thinkers who can uncover a deeper understanding of the brain and cognition.” The seven 2024 prize winners will each receive $750,000, distributed over three years.
“Cognitive Disease Disorders are holisms – wholes bigger than the sum of their parts – requiring us to apply systems-based thinking across cellular, organismic and behavioral scales,” said Pershing Square Foundation Co-Trustee Neri Oxman. “The winners of the 2024 MIND Prize embody such system-based thinking in their work.”
Fernandez-Ruiz is the Nancy and Peter Meinig Family Investigator in the Life Sciences and assistant professor of neurobiology and behavior in the College of Arts and Sciences. His work seeks to dissect the circuit and cell-type specific mechanisms of neural circuit dynamics that support memory processes, and how they became impaired in mouse models of brain diseases, with the aim of restoring memory deficits in mice and paving the road for future human applications.
His MIND Prize project is titled “Restoration of Pathological Neural Dynamics to Improve Cognition in Alzheimer’s Disease.”