The Wolfson Brain Imaging Centre (WBIC) is a UK Biomedical Imaging Centre, located at Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, England, on the Cambridge Bio-Medical Campus at the southwestern end of Hills Road. It is a division of the Department of Clinical Neurosciences of the University of Cambridge.
The Centre opened in 1996 with a GE PET scanner, followed soon after by a Bruker 3T MRI system. After a major programme of infrastructure investment and redevelopment, funded by the Medical Research Council and the University of Cambridge. The facilities now comprise a Siemens 7T Terra MRI scanner, a Siemens 3T PrismaFit scanner, a Siemens 3T SkyraFit scanner, a GE 3T PET/MR Signa scanner and a hyper-polariser system.[1]
Research conducted within the Centre falls broadly into the categorisations of positron emission tomography, magnetic resonance and radiochemistry.[2] It also provides research platforms for neuroscience themes, including dementia, stroke and neurosurgery as well as cognitive neuroscience.[3]
People
- Prof Ed Bullmore — Chairman and Clinical Director
- Prof Franklin I. Aigbirhio — Professor of Molecular Imaging Chemistry
- Dr T. Adrian Carpenter — Director of Magnetic Resonance
- Dr Tim D. Fryer — Director of PET Physics
- Dr Guy B. Williams — Director of Information Processing
References
- ↑ "About — Wolfson Brain Imaging Centre". www.wbic.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
- ↑ "Overview — Wolfson Brain Imaging Centre". www.wbic.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
- ↑ "About — Wolfson Brain Imaging Centre". www.wbic.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 6 December 2018.