[BIC-announce] Fwd: [All] Sad News

Sylvain Baillet, Dr sylvain.baillet at mcgill.ca
Fri Feb 21 15:18:16 EST 2014


Dear All:

Please see below: one of the Founding Fathers of fMRI passed away too early last week.

Sylvain.

-----------------------
Sylvain Baillet, PhD

MNI Killam and FRSQ Senior Scholar
Interim Director, McConnell Brain Imaging Centre
Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University

Begin forwarded message:

From: Bruce Rosen <bruce at nmr.mgh.harvard.edu<mailto:bruce at nmr.mgh.harvard.edu>>
Subject: Re: [All] Sad News
Date: February 21, 2014 at 2:14:45 PM EST
To: all at nmr.mgh.harvard.edu<mailto:all at nmr.mgh.harvard.edu>

On a very sad note, I wanted to share with you the news of the passing of John (Jack) Belliveau late last week.
Jack has been a visionary member of our Martinos community for close to 30 years.  Tom Brady first introduced him to me as a new graduate student from the Biophysics program at Harvard, and he quickly became a key contributor to our early efforts to measure perfusion with MRI.  More importantly, however, it was Jacks passion for understanding how the human brain worked (he was convinced that someday we would be able to capture human thought) that led him to explore the use of these newly developed perfusion imaging tools to study human brain function - that work led to his Ph.D. thesis, "Functional NMR Imaging of the Brain", starting the revolution in "Functional Imaging" that would be used by thousands of investigators over the next 30 years.  His publication of the first fMRI pictures led to the iconic image on the cover of Science that I’ve included below, along with some quotes from his thesis that have proven so prescient for how we perform dynamic fMRI today.

This work was undisputedly the very first use of MRI for human brain mapping.  It set in motion the entire field of fMRI, including Ken Kwong’s remarkable fMRI images formed without the use of contrast agents the following year.  While Ken’s contribution was of undeniable creativity and impact, there is no doubt that the MGH’s exploration of the potential of MRI to study human brain function was started, and largely driven, by Jack and his vision for how MRI could transform how we study the human brain.

For those of you who didn't know Jack personally, he was a remarkable person, intellectually and personally.  He was a larger than life figure in our community (literally and spiritually), with an infectious enthusiasm for science that all who knew him learned to love.   He showed a remarkable creativity and generosity throughout his career and life from the time he joined us as a graduate student until his passing.

We will miss him very much here - I thought that you all should know.  For now, Brigitte has asked for privacy as she and their daughter Amilee begin to deal with his loss, but I will be planning a memorial celebration of his life and science sometime soon, and of course will keep you all posted.

--
Bruce Rosen, Ph.D., M.D.
Director, Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging
Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital
Professor of Radiology and Health Sciences and Technology
Harvard Medical School and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Laurence Lamson Robbins Professor of Radiology, Harvard Medical School
Massachusetts  General Hospital
Athinoula A. Martinos Center, Room 2301
Bldg. 149 13th Street
Charlestown, MA 02129
Tel: 617-726-3197
Fx: 617-726-7422
Assistant: Donna Crowe
Email: donna at nmr.mgh.harvard.edu<mailto:donna at nmr.mgh.harvard.edu>
http://www.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/martinos/aboutUs/index.php

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