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Suggested Citation:"C Workshop Attendees." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Neuroscience Biomarkers and Biosignatures: Converging Technologies, Emerging Partnerships: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11947.
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Page 87
Suggested Citation:"C Workshop Attendees." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Neuroscience Biomarkers and Biosignatures: Converging Technologies, Emerging Partnerships: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11947.
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Page 88
Suggested Citation:"C Workshop Attendees." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Neuroscience Biomarkers and Biosignatures: Converging Technologies, Emerging Partnerships: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11947.
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Page 89
Suggested Citation:"C Workshop Attendees." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Neuroscience Biomarkers and Biosignatures: Converging Technologies, Emerging Partnerships: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11947.
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Page 90

Below is the uncorrected machine-read text of this chapter, intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text of each book. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

C Workshop Attendees C. Anthony Altar Mark Day National Institutes of Health Maryellen de Mars Oscar Alzate The Critical Path Institute Duke University Susan Feldman C. Dennis Barton New Jersey Medical School Johns Hopkins University Jarlath French-Mullen Sally Berry GeneLogic, Inc. Johnson & Johnson Steve Foote Linda Brady National Institute of Mental National Institute of Mental Health Health Philip Fung Sarah Comley National Institutes of Health International Observers Alycia Halladay Jeff Cossman Autism Speaks The Critical Path Institute Therese Heinonen Raymond Crowel Critical Markers of Disease Mental Health America Julia Heinrich Wyeth Research 87

88 NEUROSCIENCE BIOMARKERS AND BIOSIGNATURES Bruce Hermann Roger Meyer Epilepsy Foundation American College of Neuropsychopharmacology Kazunari Hirata Thomas Miller Raquel Huerta National Institutes of Health Rutgers University and University of Medicine and Ryan Mitchell Dentistry of New Jersey Pennslvania State University, College of Medicine Ekopimo Ibia Merck Research Laboratories Susan Molchan National Institutes of Health Carlayne Jackson American Academy of Avindra Nath Neurology Johns Hopkins University John Lawson Lisa Neuhold Innogenetics National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Daniel Lee Biogenidec, Inc. Steven Niemi David Lee Patricia O’Looney Foundation for the National National Multiple Sclerosis Institutes of Health Society Carole DeSpain Magoffin Carlos Pardo National Minority Quality Johns Hopkins University, Forum School of Medicine Steven Marcus Mark Rasenick Columbia University University of Illinois, College of Medicine Amy McGuire Foundation for the National Dr J. Tilak Ratnanather Institutes of Health Johns Hopkins University

APPENDIX C 89 Scott Reines David Wholley Johnson & Johnson Foundation for the National Institutes of Health Judith Rumsey National Institutes of Health Dean Wong American College of Joshua Schulman Neuropsychopharmacology Randall Smith Jimmy Zhang University of Pittsburg, School Johnson & Johnson of Pharmacy Yantian Zhang Jan Teller National Institute of Biomedical East Carolina University, Imaging and Bioengineering Brody School of Medicine Hong Wan Wyeth

Next: D Biographical Sketches of Invited Speakers, Committee Members, and Staff »
Neuroscience Biomarkers and Biosignatures: Converging Technologies, Emerging Partnerships: Workshop Summary Get This Book
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Biomarkers, or biological markers, are quantitative measurements that offer researchers and clinicians valuable insight into diagnosis, treatment and prognosis for many disorders and diseases. A major goal in neuroscience medical research is establishing biomarkers for disorders of the nervous system.

Given the promising potential and necessity for neuroscience biomarkers, the Institute of Medicine Forum on Neuroscience and Nervous System Disorders convened a public workshop and released the workshop summary entitled Neuroscience Biomarkers and Biosignatures: Converging Technologies, Emerging Partnerships.

The workshop brought together experts from multiple areas to discuss the most promising and practical arenas in neuroscience in which biomarkers will have the greatest impact. The main objective of the workshop was to identify and discuss biomarker targets that are not currently being aggressively pursued but that could have the greatest near-term impact on the rate at which new treatments are brought forward for psychiatric and neurological disorders.

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