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Finding hope in tragedy, married scientists team up to battle brain disease

Soyon Hong and Tim Bartels are researchers at the UK Dementia Research Institute at UCL working together to transform what we know about Parkinson’s disease.

From Parkinson’s to Alzheimer’s, neurodegenerative diseases are on the rise — yet few therapies exist to combat them. That’s why the Collaborative Pairs program at CZI’s Neurodegeneration Challenge Network (NDCN) is bringing together scientists to explore new ideas and new approaches.

Meet science power couple Soyon Hong and Tim Bartels: two researchers at the UK Dementia Research Institute at UCL who have found hope in the midst of personal tragedy by combining their scientific expertise in a new project supported by the NDCN.

Learn more about how the NDCN empowers scientists to pursue bold ideas in order to accelerate the science of neurodegeneration — and ultimately, the path to treatments.

  • A bride dances with her father, smiling, with an enlarged portrait of the father in the foreground. The scene is drawn over a painted blue and red background.
  • Two scientists work together at a lab bench with a microscope and bottles, illustrated on a painted red and blue backdrop.
  • A man and woman sit across from each other at a breakfast table, talking and smiling, with a child eating in the background. The scene combines illustration and photo.
  • Two hexagon-framed medical scans show a human brain and abdomen, set against a vibrant blue and red abstract background.
  • A portrait of researcher Tim Bartels is overlaid on a drawn lab background with a 3D protein structure wrapping around the image.
  • A family of four smiles in front of a colorful backdrop with painted runners, blending photography with sketch-style illustration.
  • A wedding portrait of a bride, groom, and an older man is overlaid with colorful splashes and sketch effects, with two children smiling in the foreground.

Enjoy this story? Read about another pair of scientists who have teamed up to study, treat and prevent rare pediatric diseases.

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