A grant of excellence of 25 million Danish kroner has been awarded to professor Hartwig R. Siebner of the DRCMR for a project entitled "control of actions" (ContAct). The Lundbeck Foundation is providing this generous donation that will allow researchers in Denmark and abroad to explore the mental steps involved in performing actions, e.g. decision making, planning, and acting. Research has shown that this process can be quite different from the way that the brain consciously perceives it. Using methods such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), the new project will shed light on the complicated processes behind our conscious and non-conscious actions, in healthy conditions and during disease.
Press release in Danish and contact information:
"Grant of Excellence" på 25 mio. kr. til professor Hartwig Siebner på Hvidovre Hospitals MR- afdeling vil styrke hjerneforskningen.
The Danish Council for Independent Research has granted 2.3 million Danish kroner for a project on ludomania. The project is headed by professor Hartwig R. Siebner from the DRCMR and is entitled "Neural mechanisms underlying pathological gambling: A whole brain functional MRI study in patients with Parkinson's disease treated with dopamine agonists" . The project will be performed in cooperation with the Neurological Department at Bispebjerg Hospital and DTU Informatics.
Ludomania is characterized by pathological gambling, mostly in the form of gambling for money, and have a negative impact on work and personal relationships. 7-8% of all patients with Parkinson's disease develops ludomania, when treated with dopamine agonists (DA). Game passion provoked by DA treatment provides a unique opportunity to study the increased dopaminergic stimulation by problem gambling. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) will be used to investigate Parkinson's patients with and without gambling addiction and a corresponding healthy control group.