OBI Public Talk Series: Evolution of Brain Health
Progress in brain health research is easy to underestimate — until you zoom out. Year to year, the steps can feel small. But over a decade, the change is profound: new discoveries, new treatments, and a fundamental shift in how society understands conditions that affect millions of people.
OBI's 2026-2027 Public Talk series, 'Evolution of Brain Health', traces that longer arc across three talks, each focusing on a single topic to explore how far we've come, what the science tells us today, and where it's taking us next.
Beyond the Diagnosis: The Future of Neurodiversity
For decades, neurodevelopmental conditions were studied and treated separately, one diagnosis at a time. A growing body of research is changing that, looking across diagnoses to uncover shared patterns in biology and behaviour and opening the door to treatments and care that are more precise, more effective, and built for the full spectrum of human neurodiversity.
This talk will be moderated by Jordan Antflick, OBI's Head of Integrated Discovery, and joined by Dr. Evdokia Anagnostou, VP of Research and Director of the Bloorview Research Institute and Program Manager of the Province of Ontario Neurodevelopmental Disorders (POND) Network, who will walk us through how that science is evolving. Allison Chang, a member of POND's Patient Advisory Committee, will bring lived experience to the conversation, exploring what this shift means for the people it serves.
Date: Saturday, September 12, 2026
Time: 2 PM - 3:30 PM EDT
Registration: Online | In-person (Downtown Toronto, ON)
Mental Health in the Age of Prevention
For much of recent history, mental health care meant responding to crisis. That is changing. Research is uncovering the biological roots of conditions like depression and anxiety, from inflammation to the gut-brain connection, while society is bringing mental health out of the shadows and into mainstream conversation.
The next frontier is prevention: new treatments, digital tools, and holistic lifestyle approaches that can identify risk earlier, intervene sooner, and fundamentally change what care looks like for millions of people.
Date: November 2026
Women's Brain Health: A Focused Lens
Decades of brain research defaulted to male subjects, leaving women's brain health underexplored and undertreated. This talk explores how female biology shapes distinct neurological pathways at every life stage, and what a growing body of research is revealing about the brain health implications of pregnancy, perimenopause, menopause, and beyond.
Closing that gap is not just a scientific priority. It's the foundation of the equitable care women deserve, in cognitive health as in aging.
Date: March 2027