We strive to find ways to help individuals understand their aptitude, unlock their true potential.

Founded in 2003, MSC Brain Institute became a multi-national research and consultation center devoted to understanding the cognitive mechanism of human brain and consequential output of human behavior.

In effort to understand the uniqueness of an individual and the difference amongst people, countless attempts from religious and social perspectives to scientific perspective were made to answer the two rudimentary questions about ourselves of ‘who we are’ and ‘where we came from.’ Such thirst and the devotion of mankind to understand and explore themselves led to birth of numerous academic disciplines: Philosophy, Psychology, Sociology, Biology, History, etc..

Until this date, thousands of researches and studies are being conducted by renown scholars and scientists around the world. In more recent years, some breakthroughs in the field of neuroscience and biopsychology, paralleled with technological advance, brought us more clear and measurable insight on how our brain process the information.

Nevertheless, it has been no more than a century since the scientists in different fields started working together in interdisciplinary perspective, in lieu of locking horns to each other. In recent years, apart from a century old personality analysis tools such as MBTI and similar (upgraded) models, new approaches have emerged based on more concrete neuro-scientific evidences. The theoretical foundation of our research is also originated from both abstract (meaning philosophical and cognitive) and concrete (meaning neuro-scientific and bio-psychological) aspects of human mind.

Our mission is perhaps not far different from others in the field; we strive to find ways to help individuals understand their aptitude, unlock their true potential and, ultimately, achieve self-fulfillment by finding suitable career and balances in their lives.

Having said that, the initial goal of our institute was to identify the perplexing and volatile cognitive process of human brain. Through our unique transdisciplinary approach and more than 120,000 sample study, we were able to identify and validate the link between human personality and brain orientation. In 2002, after years of trial and error, our first cognitive process and behavioral output model called, brain orientation and suitability inventory (BOSI) model was born.