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Views | Duration | |
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61. Simons Simplex Collection | 04:11 | ||
62. Collecting data on autism | 02:23 | ||
63. Research into autism genetics | 05:17 | ||
64. Remarkable people in my lab | 00:48 | ||
65. Rich O'Brien and Rich Hume | 02:53 | ||
66. Lorna Role | 01:00 | ||
67. Other talented people in my lab | 03:26 | ||
68. Neurobiology department was an extraordinary place | 01:02 | ||
69. There is no place like Harvard | 03:23 | ||
70. Ben Barres | 00:56 |
The other major issue, beside my own lab when I moved to the NIH, was Parkinson's disease. I was director of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders. We had very good relations with at least three other institutes – child health, mental health, and aging. Together we put together a Parkinson's program. I think I triggered the writing of it, it came to $1 billion, and Congress passed it. It's had a significant impact on therapy and our understanding of the disease. It's not a cure, by any means, but it's a long ways on the way.
Then after the NIH, when I moved to New York, I became consumed with autism – and consumed in a good sense. It triggered many of the things I was interested in: early development, plasticity, reversibility of disorders, organizing a team. We organized 12 different centers. Actually 13, but one was eliminated, so we ended up 12 medical centers around the country that started the Simons SSC, the Simons Simplex Collection. Which meant collecting simplex families, that is a family with one proband, at least one sibling who was not affected, and two biological parents who were not affected. Thinking, and it turned out to be true, that the one sibling might have a genetic defect that set him or her apart from the other family members. That's what the meaning of Simons Simplex Collection is. We collected over 2,000 families, small numbers when you consider what's going on with SPARK, where they're up to 50,000.
But there's a difference and the difference is very important, I think. Our evaluation of these individuals involve detailed phenotypic evaluation. I enjoy that, I learned a tremendous amount. It brought back a lot of clinical memories of mine. But the evaluation was several hours long, where both parents and the children were evaluated in great detail. Verbally, with some measurements, eye measurements, a lot of different evaluation forms, which took time to deliver and skill.
Gerald Fischbach (b. 1938) is an American neuroscientist and pioneering researcher. He pioneered the use of nerve cell cultures to study the electrophysiology, morphology and biochemistry of developing nerve-muscle and inter-neuronal synapses.
Title: Simons Simplex Collection
Listeners: Christopher Sykes
Christopher Sykes is an independent documentary producer who has made a number of films about science and scientists for BBC TV, Channel Four, and PBS.
Tags: National Institute of Neurological Disorders
Duration: 4 minutes, 11 seconds
Date story recorded: July 2023
Date story went live: 16 May 2025