Scientists will replicate human brain in 10 years
September 5th, 2009 - 12:36 pm ICT by IANSLondon, Sep 5 (IANS) Within 10 years, scientists will be able to create a model that replicates the functions of the human brain says a neuroscientist.
“I absolutely believe it is technically and biologically possible. The only uncertainty is financial. It is an extremely expensive project and not all is yet secured,” says Henry Markram, professor at the Brain Mind Institute in Switzerland.
“The brain is of course extremely complex because it has trillions of synapses, billions of neurons, millions of proteins, and thousands of genes. But they are still finite in number,” says Markram.
“Today’s technology is already highly sophisticated and it allows us to reverse engineer the brain rapidly.” An example of the capability already in place is that today’s robots can do screenings and mappings tens of thousands of times faster than humans.
Another hurdle on the path to a model human brain is that 100 years of neuroscience discovery has led to millions of fragments of data and knowledge that have never been brought together and exploited fully.
“The biggest challenge is to understand how electrical-magnetic-chemical patterns in the brain convert into our perception of reality. We think we see with our eyes, but in fact most of what we ’see’ is generated as a projection by your brain. So what are we actually looking at when we look at something ‘outside’ us?”
For Markram, the most exciting part of his research is putting together the hundreds of thousands of small pieces of data that his lab has collected over the past 15 years, and seeing what a microcircuit of the brain looks like.
“When we first switched it on it already started to display some interesting emergent properties. But this is just the beginning because we know now that it is possible to build it.
“As we progress we are learning about design secrets of our brains which were unimaginable before. In fact the brain uses some simple rules to solve highly complex problems and extracting each of these rules one by one is very exciting.”
“For example, we have been surprised at finding simple design principles that allow billions of neurons to connect to each other. I think we will understand how the brain is designed and works before we have finished building it,” Markram says.
The opportunities for this neuroscience research challenge are immense, explains Markram, according to an AlphaGalileo Foundation release.
“A brain model will sit on a massive supercomputer and serve as a kind of educational and diagnostic service to society. As the industrial revolution in science progresses we will generate more data than anyone can track or any computer can store, so models that can absorb it are simply unavoidable.”
- Human brain could be replicated in a decade - Sep 05, 2009
- Memory 'may be built with Lego-like building blocks of knowledge' - Mar 18, 2011
- Neurons could inspire next generation of computers - Jul 24, 2010
- Technique 'poised to untangle brain's complexity' developed - Apr 11, 2011
- How neurons in the brain decide how to transmit information - Mar 26, 2011
- Project to build computer model of human brain takes off - May 16, 2011
- Elusive memory molecule identified - Jun 27, 2011
- How nerve cells unravel jumbled information - Nov 21, 2011
- Exercise won't help you if you are sedentary - Mar 26, 2012
- Why cocaine is so addictive - Oct 19, 2010
- Potential link between immunity, schizophrenia revealed - Feb 28, 2011
- Scientists create synthetic brain cell - Apr 25, 2011
- Scientists: "Troops could 'control guns with their minds'" - Feb 08, 2012
- Neuroscientists track how brain cells process information - Jul 13, 2011
- Single shot relieves pain in spinal injuries - Dec 02, 2011
Tags: 100 years, billions, brain mind, brains, chemical patterns, design secrets, emergent properties, fragments, functions of the human brain, genes, henry markram, hundreds of thousands, hurdle, microcircuit, model human, neuroscientist, proteins, small pieces, synapses, trillions