(Press-News.org) Chicago, Illinois - Understanding the human brain is one of the greatest challenges facing 21st century science. If we can rise to this challenge, we will gain profound insights into what makes us human, develop new treatments for brain diseases, and build revolutionary new computing technologies that will have far reaching effects, not only in neuroscience.
Scientists at the European Human Brain Project—set to announce more than a dozen new research partnerships worth Eur 8.3 million in funding later this month—the Allen Institute for Brain Science, and the US BRAIN Initiative are developing new paradigms for understanding how the human brain works in health and disease. Today, their international and collaborative projects are defined, explored, and compared during "Inventing New Ways to Understand the Human Brain," at the 2014 AAAS Annual Meeting in Chicago.
Brain Simulation, Big Data, and a New Computing Paradigm
Henry Markram from the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
(EPFL), in Switzerland, where the Human Brain Project is based, describes how the project will leverage available experimental data and basic principles of brain organization to reconstruct the detailed structure of the brain in computer models. The models will allow the HBP to run super-computer based simulations of the inner working of the brain.
"Brain simulation allows measurements and manipulations impossible in the lab, opening the road to a new kind of in silico experimentation," Markram says.
The data deluge in neuroscience is resulting in a revolutionary amount of brain data with new initiatives planning to acquire even more. But searching, accessing, and analyzing this data remains a key challenge.
Sean Hill, also of EPFL and a speaker at AAAS, leads The Neuroinformatics Platform of the Human Brain Project (HBP). In this scientific panel, he explains how the platform will provide tools to manage, navigate, and annotate spatially referenced brain atlases, which will form the basis for the HBP's modeling effort—turning Big Data into deep knowledge.
The Neuroinformatics Platform will bring together many different kinds of data. University of Edinburgh's Seth Grant, a key member of the HBP, describes how he is deriving new methods to decode the molecular principles underlying the brain's organization, such as how individual proteins assemble into larger complexes. As Grant explains in Chicago, this has important practical applications as many mutations in schizophrenia and autism converge on these so-called supercomplexes in the brain.
As we understand more and more about the way the brain computes we can apply this knowledge to technology. Karlheinz Meier, of Heidelberg University in Germany and a speaker at AAAS, outlines how he is working to create entirely new computing systems as part of the HBP. These Neuromorphic Computing Systems will merge realistic brain models with new hardware for a completely new paradigm of computing—one that more closely resembles how the brain itself processes information.
"The brain has the ability to efficiently perform computations that are impossible even for the most powerful computers while consuming only 30 Watts of power," Meier says.
Brain: Get Ready For Your Close-up
At AAAS, Christof Koch lays out another ambitious, 10-year plan from the Allen Institute for Brain Science: to understand the structure and function of the brain by mapping cell types from mice and humans with computer simulations and figuring out how the cells connect, and how they encode, relay, and process information. The project, Koch says, promises massive, multimodal, and open-access datasets and methodology that will be reproducible and scalable.
At Harvard University, George Church is participating in the Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative, which aims to map every neuron in the brain with rapidly advancing technologies. At AAAS, he describes progress on new tools for measurements of brain cell development, connectivity, and functional state dynamics in rodent and human clinical samples.
What do all of these projects have in common? They seek to help find some of the most elusive answers known to man: what makes us human, how does the brain function, what causes neurological and mental illness, and, most importantly, how can we treat or cure these afflictions?
INFORMATION:
About the Human Brain Project (HBP)
The goal of the HBP is to build a completely new Information and Communications Technology infrastructure for neuroscience and for brain-related research in medicine and computing, catalyzing a global collaborative effort to understand the human brain and its diseases and ultimately to emulate its computational capabilities.
The 10-year, 1 billion Euro project funded by the EU's FET Flagship Program was launched on October 1, 2013, and involves 80 leading universities and research institutions from 22 European countries as well as the US, Canada, Japan, and China.
Later this month (February 2014), the HBP and the EU will announce more than a dozen new research partnerships worth up to Eur 8.3 million based on the results of competitive calls for proposals opened in October, 2013, and currently in the final stages of selection. Research proposals cover topics from cognitive architectures to virtual robotic environments to the theory of multiscale circuits. The winners become full members of the global Human Brain Project Consortium.
A key aspect of the HBP is the use of supercomputer-based modeling. As supercomputers move towards the exascale and the quality of our models improves, HBP models will make it possible to conduct in silico experiments impossible in the lab.
The project has a strong focus on applications in computing and in medicine. In computing, the project will transfer simplified versions of its brain models into novel "neuromorphic computing systems" with capabilities completely lacking in current computing technology.
In medicine, the project will create tools making it possible to mine large volumes of anonymized patient data, to identify the "biological signatures" of neurological and psychiatric disease, and ultimately to build computer models of specific conditions. Such models will facilitate the screening of new treatments, speeding up drug development, and encouraging urgently needed investment in Central Nervous System research.
https://www.humanbrainproject.eu
About EPFL
EPFL's community is composed of 13,400 people representing more than 125 nationalities—9,900 Bachelor's, Master's, and PhD students; 329 professors; and 3,500 researchers, technicians and administrative staff. Lectures are completely bilingual (English/French) from the Master's level and up. Of international prestige, EPFL stands out by focusing on international partnerships, sponsorships, and joint projects between academia and industry.
information.epfl.ch/glance
Attend the AAAS Symposium:
Inventing New Ways to Understand the Human Brain
When: Sunday 16 February 08:30 am(Chicago)
Where: Crystal Ballroom A (Hyatt Regency Chicago)
Find it: http://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2014/webprogram/Session7225.html
Press Material
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheHumanBrainProject/videos
Media Contacts
Hillary Sanctuary, EPFL Media Relations, Switzerland
Email: Hillary.sanctuary@epfl.ch
Telephone: +41 21 693 7022
Mobile: +41 79 703 4809
Lionel Pousaz, EPFL Editor-in-Chief, Switzerland
Email: lionel.pousaz@epfl.ch
Telephone+41 21 693 35227
Thinking it through: Scientists seek to unlock mysteries of the brain
2014-02-16
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Loneliness is a major health risk for older adults
2014-02-16
Feeling extreme loneliness can increase an older
person's chances of premature death by 14 percent, according to research by John Cacioppo,
professor of psychology at the University of Chicago.
Cacioppo and his colleagues' work
shows that the impact of loneliness on premature death is nearly as strong as the impact of
disadvantaged socioeconomic status, which they found increases the chances of dying early by 19
percent. A 2010 meta-analysis showed that loneliness has twice the impact on early death as does
obesity, he said.
Cacioppo, the Tiffany ...
Misconceptions of science and religion found in new study
2014-02-16
The public's view that science and religion can't work in collaboration is a misconception that stunts progress, according to a new survey of more than 10,000 Americans, scientists and evangelical Protestants. The study by Rice University also found that scientists and the general public are surprisingly similar in their religious practices.
The study, "Religious Understandings of Science (RUS)," was conducted by sociologist Elaine Howard Ecklund and presented today in Chicago during the annual American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) conference. ...
Archaeologists lend long-term perspective to food security and climate shock
2014-02-16
CHICAGO – What role does pre-existing vulnerabilities play for people who experience a climate shock? Does it amplify the effects of the climate shock or is effect negligible? Four Arizona State University archaeologists are looking into this as part of an international team examining how people can be most resilient to climate change when it comes to food security.
The group questioned whether vulnerability to food shortages prior to a climate shock – not the actual experience of the food shortage – is related to the scale of impact of that shock. They found a strong ...
Cultural foundations of human social behavior
2014-02-16
CHICAGO --- Joan Chiao, assistant professor of psychology in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences at Northwestern University, will discuss her research "Cultural and Neural Basis of Empathy" at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Chicago.
Her presentation is part of the symposium "Physiological and Cultural Foundations of Human Social Behavior" to be held from 3 to 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 15 in Grand Ballroom E of the Hyatt Regency Chicago.
The session will focus on recent findings in social neurosciences and ...
Contemplating the workplace of tomorrow
2014-02-16
CHICAGO --- Robert Gordon, the Stanley G. Harris Professor in the department of economics in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences at Northwestern University, will present "Long-Term Unemployment, Shrinking Participation and Future Economic Growth" at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Chicago.
His presentation is part of the symposium "Will the Workplace of Tomorrow Have Any Workers? Computing, Productivity and Jobs" to be held from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 15 in the Water Tower room at the Hyatt Regency Chicago.
In ...
Top-down and bottom-up approach needed to conserve potato agrobiodiversity
2014-02-16
Mashed, smashed and fried, Americans love potatoes, but only a few varieties are grown in much of North American agriculture. In South America, where potatoes originated, more than 5,000 varieties continue to exist. A Penn State geographer is gathering all the information he can about the agrobiodiversity of these uniquely adapted tubers with an eye toward sustainability of this fourth largest food crop worldwide.
"In the U.S. we rely primarily on 10 to 12 types of potatoes total," said Karl Zimmerer, department head and professor of geography. "In fact, mostly we use ...
Robotic fish aids understanding of how animals move
2014-02-16
The weakly electric black ghost knifefish of the Amazon basin has inspired Northwestern University's Malcolm MacIver and an interdisciplinary team of researchers to develop agile fish robots that could lead to a vast improvement in underwater vehicles used to study fragile coral reefs, repair damaged deep-sea oil rigs or investigate sunken ships.
MacIver will discuss the research at a press briefing, "Robots from Nature: Making Mechanical Animals," to be held at 1 p.m. CST Saturday, Feb. 15, in Vevey Room 3 of the Swissôtel Chicago. The briefing is part of the American ...
Stanford scientist to unveil 50-state plan to transform US to renewable energy
2014-02-16
Stanford Professor Mark Jacobson and his colleagues recently developed detailed plans to
transform the energy infrastructure of New York, California and Washington states from fossil fuels
to 100 percent renewable resources by 2050. On Feb. 15, Jacobson will present a new roadmap to
renewable energy for all 50 states at the annual meeting of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Chicago.
The online interactive roadmap is tailored to maximize the resource potential of each state.
Hovering a cursor over California, for example, reveals ...
Research on urban ghettos must recognize differences among cities
2014-02-16
Research on urban neighborhoods must take into account differences among cities and rely on some techniques that have not been used extensively by sociologists studying neighborhood effects, according to Mario Small, professor of sociology at the University of Chicago.
Small, who is also dean of UChicago's Division of the Social Sciences, studies urban neighborhoods and has studied the diversity of experiences for people living in poor neighborhoods in cities across the country.
Studying only a few neighborhoods extensively fails to capture important differences, ...
Making biodiverse agriculture part of a food-secure future
2014-02-16
Is biodiverse agriculture an anachronism? Or is it a vital part of a food-secure future?
Given the need to feed an estimated 2.4 billion more people by the year 2050, the drive toward large-scale, single-crop farming around the world may seem inexorable.
But there's an important downside to this trend, argues Timothy Johns, Professor of Human Nutrition at McGill University in Montreal, in a paper to be presented Saturday, Feb. 15, at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Chicago.
Diets for most people around the world are becoming ...