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The Mind Research Network (MRN) is an independent non-profit organization dedicated to advancing the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness and brain injury.
Headquartered in Albuquerque, New Mexico, MRN consists of an interdisciplinary association of scientists located at universities, national laboratories and research centers around the world and is focused on imaging technology and its emergence as an integral element of neuroscience investigation. With an extended community of academicians, researchers, graduate students and technicians, the MRN is uniquely positioned with its national infrastructure to link the brightest minds in neuroscience with some of the most cutting-edge neuroimaging capabilities in the world today.
Founded in 1998, the MRN’s initial plan called for the building of state-of-the-art magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetoencephalogram (MEG) neuroimaging systems to be applied to studies of mental illness. This important task was carried out by Mind’s initial collaborators: Massachusetts General Hospital’s Martinos Biomedical Imaging Center (Harvard and MIT), the University of Minnesota, the University of New Mexico, and Los Alamos National Laboratory. Since both the Network and the mission have expanded beyond building neuroimaging tools, a comprehensive understanding of mental illness requires a more fundamental and systematic understanding of the brain. The MRN Partnership The sites that make up the MRN offer impressive resources for performing neuroimaging research. In New Mexico, one strength is the University of New Mexico, which provides a strong academic and research partner. Many of the senior staff at the MRN also are tenured or tenure-track faculty at UNM. UNM also supports the Biomedical Research and Integrative Neuroscience (BRaIN) Center, which provides facilities for performing translational research studies that are impossible in most settings. Another strength of New Mexico is the national laboratories, including Sandia and Los Alamos. These two facilities offer tremendous resources in engineering and computational facilities and expertise. Outside of New Mexico, the National Mind Research Network is equally strong. FMRI methodology was developed and introduced by independent and concurrent efforts at the University of Minnesota (CMRR) and the Massachusetts General Hospital NMR Center. These two centers continue to lead the evolution and applications of MRI methodology. The MRN has also benefited from their significance expertise in MEG and other imaging technologies. For more information on our Partner Sites |
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University of Minnesota and Minneapolis VA |
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Along with MGH, the Center for Magnetic Resonance Research (CMRR) at UMN is a premier center for MRI research and development and the Minneapolis VA Brain Sciences Center (BSC) focuses on MEG development using equipment purchased using Mind funds. |
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Massachusetts General Hospital |
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MGH’s Martinos Biomedical Imaging Center is one of the world’s premier sites for performing neuroimaging research. |
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BRaIN and University of New Mexico |
The University of New Mexico Biomedical Research and Integrative Neuroscience (BRaIN) Center is co-located in Pete and Nancy Domenici Hall with the Mind Research Network. |
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Mobile MRI Scanning Facility |
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The MRN Mobile Imaging system is a custom designed one-of-a-kind facility. The heart of the mobile system is a Siemens’ 1.5T Avanto MRI. The Avanto is the most advanced 1.5T system in the Siemens product line. |
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The 3T Tesla Siemens Trio is a state of the art MRI scanner capable of delivering high quality MRI scans quickly. Some of its features are: 1) 32 RF channels x 102 coil elements 2) multinuclear support 3) clinical features (extremity coil, shoulder array coil, spectrus injector) 4) additional software (eg BLADE, inline diffusion/BOLD, spectroscopy, cardiac, adv functional neuro and other software. We have included some examples of real data that were acquired with this scanner in New Mexico. |
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The 1.5T Siemens Sonata clinical MRI system is dedicated to both clinical and preclinical imaging research. This system has high-end magnetic gradients that provide the capability for both high-speed interventional MRI research as well as high-resolution MRI (100-300 um). Siemens Sonata Maestro 1.5 Tesla MRI system equipped with standard transmit and receive RF coils, as well as receive-only surface coils. The system is capable of BOLD EPI, diffusion tensor imaging, perfusion and diffusion imaging, and spectroscopy. This system is interfaced to an MR-compatible patient monitoring unit featuring pulsed oximetry, heart rate monitor, O2, CO2, NO, and halothane measurement, blood pressure and EKG (OmniTrak, InVivo Research, Inc. Orlando, FL). TurboFIRE real-time data analysis software is directly interfaced to the scanner operating system. |
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The CTF 275 is a whole head magnetoencephalograph (MEG) which detects magnetic activity of the brain. Each of the 275 sensors is an axial gradiometer (superconducting magnetometer), and this high sensor density allows for excellent spatial resolution, particularly for cortical surface activity. Real time data acquisition occurs at kHz rates. The MEG is housed in a magnetically shielded room providing a low noise floor of 5-7 fT. The system is integrated with simultaneous high density EEG (up to 128 channels), and has simultaneous EOG and EKG capabilities. |
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BabySQUID® for Human Brain Development Research |
Magnetoencephalography (MEG) is a neuroimaging technique that has extremely good temporal resolution (<1 ms) and good spatial resolution (0.5 cm). MEG (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetoencephalography) and EEG (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroencephalography) are completely noninvasive neuroimaging techniques. This means that both techniques are passive (no external signal is applied to the brain) and are simply measuring activity that naturally occurs either in the resting state or in response to some sensory stimulus. |
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