Thank you.
We're very fortunate at the University of Calgary to have the Hotchkiss Brain Institute, which is a major investment from our community in the university to advance research in neuroscience.
These diseases that you just mentioned are horrible. While we're unlocking the biological causes, in the neurosciences, of what produces these results, we have to look at many different alternatives to assuage the difficulties associated with it for both the individual patient and with the families.
The key piece is the evidence-based approach or the peer-reviewed approach of ideas that could help in that area. It's putting the ideas forward, testing them in situ—testing them in the hospitals and testing them with the families to move that forward—and then choosing the best outcomes.
While we figure out some of the root causes and while we figure out some of the better therapies, again, it's the multidisciplinary approach of bringing in these different pieces of the environment that the patient is in, like the track record of the individual's experience throughout their lifetime, what they've been exposed to and things like that. Those all require integration of information from social sciences, as well as familial relationships and so on.
Again, it's pulling that information together to come up with efficient therapies that are tested.