Ryan D'Arcy


Ryan C.N. D'Arcy is a Canadian neuroscientist, researcher, innovator and entrepreneur. Dr. Ryan D'Arcy co-founded and serves as President and Chief Scientific Officer. HealthTech Connex translates neuroscience advances into health technology breakthroughs. Dr. D'Arcy is most known for coining the term "brain vital signs" and for leading the research and development of the brain vital signs framework.
He is also a full tenured professor with appointments at both Simon Fraser University and the University of British Columbia. He holds the Surrey Memorial Hospital Foundation BC Leadership Chair in Multimodal Technology for Healthcare Innovations. Dr. D'Arcy has published more than 250 academic works, generated more than $85 million in competitive research and innovation investment, and has been recognized through numerous national and international awards and distinctions.
Throughout his career, Dr. D'Arcy has been advancing brain innovations. He constantly champions Canada's role in the world's neuroscience sphere. He has been advocating for the brain to be monitored regularly to track one's health, as part of any other body's vital signs. He is strongly focused on optimizing brain health through objective measurements to find the best treatments. His work has involved developing accessible technology improvements for evaluation and treatment in brain injury and concussion along with other brain conditions such as dementia, epilepsy, brain tumours and stroke.
Dr. D'Arcy has played instrumental roles in advancing Canada's biotechnology industry through founding and co-founding a number of large-scale health-technology initiatives over the course of his career while at the and Simon Fraser University/Surrey Memorial Hospital. These initiatives include NRC's Institute of Biodiagnostics, now called , and BC's , encompassing Surrey Memorial Hospital's Health Sciences and Innovation initiative, Innovation Boulevard, the NeuroTech and , the HealthTech Innovation Hub and the BrainNET initiative. The continues to grow towards the planned goals of over 1.5 million square feet of health/technology/innovation space, employing more than 15,000 tech and tech related jobs, and generating more than $1.1 billion into the economy annually.

Early life and education

Born and raised in Williams Lake, British Columbia, Ryan D'Arcy attended Brentwood College School, on Vancouver Island, graduating in 1990. He earned a B.Sc. from the University of Victoria in 1996, an M.Sc. in neuropsychology in 1998 and a Ph.D. in neuroscience in 2002 from Dalhousie University. D'Arcy was a Killam Scholar while at Dalhousie University. In 2001, he moved to NRC’s Institute for Biodiagnostics for a Research Associate/Postdoctoral Fellowship in Magnetic Resonance Imaging Physics.  He is a member of the Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of British Columbia, as an engineering licensee with a specialization in neuroimaging and neurotechnology.

Brain Vital Signs

Foundational research that led to the concept of brain vital signs started in 1995, with Dr. D’Arcy leading the development of the first rapid, easy, point-of-care measurement of brain waves in 2011. The objective was to utilize electroencephalography data, and particularly cognitive evoked potentials, also known as event-related potentials, as an objective physiological measure of brain function. ERPs were well established but had not been translated into a clinically accessible framework in a manner similar to the measurement of a body's vital signs like blood pressure. D’Arcy’s team developed a new brain vital sign framework specific to the evaluation and monitoring of brain function. The brain vital signs framework, which derived from the earlier Halifax Consciousness Scanner work, objectively analyzes complex EEG data through, which then provides simple, practical and objective physiological markers of brain function.
The research team subsequently published a series of studies on the development of brain vital signs. These included the Frontiers in Neuroscience Journal, which remains the most highly accessed paper in the journal's history and ranked in the top 5% of research outputs scored by Altmetrics, and findings from a multi-year hockey concussion study conducted in collaboration with the Mayo Clinic Sports Medicine Center in Brain: A Journal of Neurology. The latter study was the first to demonstrate that brain vital sign monitoring is more sensitive in detecting impairments than existing clinical tests for concussions.

HealthTech Connex Inc.

In 2013, D’Arcy and Kirk Fisher co-founded . Derived from the brain vital sign science, HealthTech Connex conceived the ™ Platform to convert electroencephalography recordings of the N100, P300, and N400 into a rapid, portable, non-invasive evaluation platform for point-of-care deployment.

Health and Technology District

D'Arcy also co-founded the with , a Canadian family-owned and operated development, construction and facility management company based in Surrey, British Columbia. The Health and Technology District is a rapidly growing and dynamic new health tech sector located in the heart of Surrey’s emerging innovation ecosystem. The District includes a series of high-tech buildings located and under expansion, directly adjacent to Surrey Memorial Hospital, one of Canada's busiest hospitals.
The District is a unique cluster of large, multinational and start-up companies, international partners, clinical and research facilities, scientists, innovators and entrepreneurs. It is also where an abundance of healthcare environments, patients and clinicians are co-located, working in partnership to accelerate the implementation of technologies and solutions towards health care impacts and improvements.
The Lark Group developed the Health and Technology District in anticipation of the rapidly growing health and technology sector in British Columbia. The District currently consists of two buildings, City Centre 1 and 2, with City Centre 3 breaking ground in late 2018.
In 2019, D'Arcy spearheaded the formation of within the Health and Technology District, a clinical-academic-innovation network dedicated to bringing advances in neuro-technologies to individual improvements in brain health through a consortium of initiatives and technologies.

Translating Research into Real-life Impacts

D’Arcy has been credited in helping translate neuroscience advances into real-life impacts.
Since 1995, D’Arcy and his research team have led the development of using event-related potentials for clinical evaluations of brain function. In 2010, they developed the Halifax Consciousness Scanner, a portable ERP device that quickly determines neurological function in cases of severe brain trauma. The HCS technology was widely recognized with several innovation awards, including the 2015 Winner of Wall Street Journal’s Global Technology Start-up Showcase. While developed for functional status evaluation, the HCS prototype ultimately led to the discovery of the brain vital signs framework, which has since led the development the NeuroCatchTM Platform through HealthTech Connex. The NeuroCatch™ Platform received its first regulator approval as a Class II Medical Device from Health Canada in early 2019.
In 2008, together with neuroscientist and neurosurgeon , D'Arcy was part of the research team at the National Research Council at Dalhousie University in developing the world's first virtual reality based neurosurgical simulation and rehearsal tool , which was subsequently licensed to CAE Inc. as NeuroVR. Subsequently, D'Arcy and Clarke teamed up again, this time with to develop , a suite of portable surgical simulation training tools used to train perioperative nurses.
D’Arcy was the driving force and original thought leader behind the Simon Fraser University's rapid growth in medical technology research, with the launch of the ImageTech Lab. The SFU ImageTechLab is a first-of-its-kind research facility in Western Canada, combining state-of-the-art imaging devices to advance brain/body research, and focus on advanced diagnostics and treatment in neurology, mental health and other healthcare areas. The ImageTech Lab completed the large-scale initiative announced April 2013 by then City of Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts to create the Mayor's Health Technology Working Group with D’Arcy as co-chair. It composed of leaders from the health, education and development communities to shape a new health-tech region located between Simon Fraser University Surrey and Surrey Memorial Hospital called Innovation Boulevard.
Since 2009, D’Arcy has been helping rehabilitate Trevor Greene, a Canadian war veteran and brain injury survivor who was attacked while on tour in Afghanistan with an axe to the head. D'Arcy, together with Trevor and his wife Debbie Greene, have been breaking down the limits of recovery through the use of brain imaging, assistive device, and neuro-modulation technologies paired with intensive rehabilitation. The project has since progressed towards Trevor's goal to climb to the Mount Everest base camp, and catalyzed the Legion Veteran's Village initiative to revitalize Legions across the country into centres for excellence in rehabilitation and post-traumatic stress disorder.
As an innovative thought leader, endowed university professor and international speaker, Dr. D’Arcy speaks frequently to large audiences and have done so extensively over the course of his career. A large part of his career has been focused on communicating technology and scientific advances outside of academic and technical scientific forums. He is a 3-times TEDx speaker including Surrey’s , TEDxSFU and TEDxBrentwoodCollegeSchool, and has frequently represented Canada in health technology innovation events throughout the world, including leading brain technology missions around the world for over a decade.

Awards

D'Arcy has been awarded a Public Service Award of Excellence, The National Research Council's Research Breakthrough of the Year, and the Discovery Award for Innovation.
D’Arcy's team was awarded the International Global Best Award in STEM in 2016.
D'Arcy's HealthTech Connex Inc. team won a 2018 Surrey Business Excellence Award from the Surrey Board of Trade.
D’Arcy was highlighted as “a Kickass Canadian” amongst other prominent Canadian leaders.

Selected publications

Dr. Ryan D'Arcy's published works include: