IIT Madras alumnus Prem Watsa contributes US$ 5 million for brain research
The US$ 5 million grant is being donated to support the brain research activities at the Sudha Gopalakrishnan Brain Centre at IIT Madras.

Alivia Mukherjee | June 18, 2024 | 05:24 PM IST
NEW DELHI: The Fairfax Financial Holdings Limited, a Canadian financial firm established by Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras alumnus Prem Watsa, will contribute US$ 5 million (about INR 41 crore) to support research at IIT Madras' Sudha Gopalakrishnan Brain Centre.
V Prem Watsa, an IIT Madras graduate with a first class degree in chemical engineering from 1971 batch, received the distinguished alumnus award in 1999. The donation was facilitated by the Canadian Friends of IIT-Madras (CFIITM), a registered charity with the Canadian Revenue Agency (CRA), which aims to promote the interests of IIT Madras among its Canadian alumni and the broader Canadian community.
Project on brain imaging at cellular level
As per the official press release, the Sudha Gopalakrishnan Brain Centre, established in March 2022, aims to drive an ambitious global project focused on imaging the human brain at the cellular level, producing unprecedented human brain data, scientific outputs, and technological tools.
Development of high-throughput histology pipeline
The IIT Madras Sudha Gopalakrishnan Brain Centre has developed a high-throughput histology pipeline, capable of converting whole human brains into petabyte-scale high-resolution digital images. As per the official press release, these unique, first-in-class datasets of various human brains offer an unprecedented, detailed view at the cellular level across the entire brain. Leading neuroscience experts worldwide are studying this data to gain new insights and make discoveries.
Prem Watsa commends IIT Madras brain centre's research excellence
Commending the research underway at this Centre, Prem Watsa, founder, chairman, and chief executive officer of Fairfax Financial Holdings Limited, said, “The quality of work and the team’s commitment at IITM’s Sudha Gopalakrishnan Brain Centre is truly outstanding. The technology platform they have developed that generates high-resolution image volumes of human brains is very unique. It has a far reaching impact in advancing our knowledge of human brains, developing insights that will lead to solutions for highly challenging brain diseases.”
Prem Watsa added, “To handle this enormous complexity, they are working in close collaboration with brain researchers in various fields around the world. Fairfax is pleased to support this cutting-edge R&D work and we wish them the very best to reach greater heights.”
Further, Kris Gopalakrishnan, co-founder of Infosys and distinguished alumnus of IIT Madras who played a key role in establishing the Centre said, “I compliment Prem Watsa on his contribution to the Brain Centre at IIT Madras. This augments the support the Centre is already receiving from various philanthropic and CSR funds and enables the Centre to scale up its research on human brain atlas.”
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- ICSI study material enough to clear CSEET; absolutely against private coaching: President
- Navigating Uncertainty: How Ivy League aspirants can tackle US visa challenges
- Education in Manipur: Futures at risk as ethnic violence derails academic dreams of over 50,000 students
- SC enrollment 5.2%, ST’s negligible 1%: Panel flags forward caste dominance in top private universities
- ITEP set for exponential growth as 1,400 institutes seek to launch new four-year teacher training course
- Holding CBSE Class 10 twice can lead to ‘paper leaks, irregularities’, warns parliament panel
- Reservation in private universities, NTA annual reports, CUET review among Parliament panel’s recommendations
- Biodiversity Courses: Central University of Odisha caught in the middle of research vs jobs debate
- ‘Not justified’ to withhold SSA funds over PM SHRI schools: Parliament panel
- PhD admission gaps: Why marginalised candidates struggle to fill reserved seats across central universities