Abstract

In 2007, drawing inspiration from her previous experiments on chick embryos, Rita Levi-Montalcini, at the age of 98, proposed a new project, and a research group, in which I was included, was formed at the European Brain Research Institute (EBRI). Looking back on this experience, I can say that Professor Levi-Montalcini’s approach and the relationships she formed with my colleagues and me, contributed to my growth as a researcher. With her welcoming and warm-hearted disposition, she taught me how to consider other people’s ideas without prejudice, to reason and not to exclude any hypothesis. I also learned from her how to overcome those difficulties that are so frequent in the research field, always keeping in mind the starting point and looking toward the objective, with a factual optimism. I was just a young researcher and deeply flattered that a Nobel Laureate, with an incredible career and extraordinary life, treated me as her equal. My experience with Professor Levi-Montalcini has also provided me with a reliable path to follow, and when I encounter difficulties and challenges, I ask myself what would she have done. This approach has always helped me to move forward. Indeed, I believe the best way to celebrate Rita Levi-Montalcini as a woman in neuroscience is to recount how her exceptional example is a constant reminder as to why I have chosen to be a scientist. I hope she will always continue to be a source of inspiration for scientists in the future.

Highlights

  • Rita Levi-Montalcini was born in 1909 in Turin and her life was both long and extraordinary

  • She demonstrated that she was a free thinker upon leaving Italy to continue her research in the United States, and when she subsequently conceived the “theory of neurotrophins,” despite it being against the current flow of ideas on nervous system development

  • In 1969, Rita Levi-Montalcini returned to Italy to manage the Centre of Neurobiology of the National Research Council (Rome), but continued to “commute” between the United States and Italy in order to monitor her laboratory at Washington University

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Summary

Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience

In 2007, drawing inspiration from her previous experiments on chick embryos, Rita LeviMontalcini, at the age of 98, proposed a new project, and a research group, in which I was included, was formed at the European Brain Research Institute (EBRI). Looking back on this experience, I can say that Professor Levi-Montalcini’s approach and the relationships she formed with my colleagues and me, contributed to my growth as a researcher. My experience with Professor Levi-Montalcini has provided me with a reliable path to follow, and when I encounter difficulties and challenges, I ask myself what would she have done This approach has always helped me to move forward.

INTRODUCTION
EMBRYO CHICK PROJECT
PUBLIC LIFE
What did I learn from her?
DISCUSSION
Full Text
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