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Science

Gigantic New 3D Map Traces Every Neuron In a Tiny Mouse Brain (livescience.com) 35

Rick Schumann shares a report from Live Science: Researchers at the Allen Institute for Brain Science, a Seattle nonprofit dedicated to neuroscience, have been painstakingly recording every brain cell and every connection between those neurons in mice for the past several years. The result represents major progress since an earlier, simpler map they released in 2016. The now-complete map encompasses about 100 million cells, the institute reported in a paper published today (May 7) in the journal Cell.

Typically, researchers trace connections between brain cells using thin slices of tissue that can be imaged and explored layer by layer. To build a comprehensive, three-dimensional map, the Allen Institute team instead broke the mouse brain into "voxels" -- 3D pixels -- and then mapped the cells and connections within each voxel. The result comprises an "average" of the brains of 1,675 laboratory mice, to make sure the map was as standard as possible. [...] Mice are common "model organisms" in neuroscience. Their brains have fairly similar structures to humans', they can be trained, they breed easily, and researchers have already developed robust understandings of how their brains work. The hope is that the map will bring that understanding to a new level, the Allen Institute said. In doing so, neuroscientists will have a tool with which to develop new research programs and accelerate research already underway.

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Gigantic New 3D Map Traces Every Neuron In a Tiny Mouse Brain

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  • An artificial mouse, with an artificial brain. Might be handy for autonomous pipe inspection drones.

    My second thought was that it combined the multi-dimensional beings in Hitchhikers' Guide with the computer they built (Deep Thought)

  • by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Friday May 08, 2020 @04:06AM (#60035190) Journal

    !

  • 100 million cells, but the article doesnt say how many interconnections between them.

    It seems that thats the important bit, but its left out.
  • by moxrespawn ( 6714000 ) on Friday May 08, 2020 @04:59AM (#60035300)

    researchers have already developed robust understandings of how their brains work.

    No, no they haven't.

    If they did, we could emulate it. We can't, remotely. We "understand" no level of simplicity of consciousness.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        The processing power required for such an effort would be staggering. Our most powerful supercomputers would be about as effective as a baby with an abacus. ASICs aren't going to be anywhere near enough.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • I'd think there are commonalities that exist between the brain of one animal and another of the same species, and that's what they're looking for here, not the ability to make a fully functioning synthetic mouse brain, they want a working model of a mouse brain.
      • "regrow an organism from DNA"

        DNA on its own doesn't contain the information needed for that.

        -mrc

    • researchers have already developed robust understandings of how their brains work.

      No, no they haven't.

      Quite so. It is useful to compare this neuron map to one that has been available for a small marine work, C. elegans, for years now. It has 303 neurons exactly (and 959 cells total). Every connection between every neuron has been mapped, and the *type* of connection determined too.

      So we must have a good computer model of this super simple brain right? No. We don't even have a good model of one of its neurons, which is itself a complex computational system.

      And we are still trying to develop a good working de

    • We "understand" no level of simplicity of consciousness.

      Nor will we, at least not while we're metaphysically in this form; I dare say it'd be logically impossible,

    • by Megol ( 3135005 )

      If I understand the mechanics of a computer I'd have a robust understanding how they work. But that would be on transistor - interconnect level, there are more levels including the software layers. Consciousness would be software if there isn't quantum woo magic involved.

  • by nagora ( 177841 ) on Friday May 08, 2020 @07:27AM (#60035538)

    Neurons are all there is to thought and intelligence.

    • Well, mostly neurons. Glial cells do have a role to play in influencing them, and there are chemical signals other than just neurotransmitters. But mostly neurons.

    • Like everything else in Life, complexity is layered.

      Neurons.
      Dendrites.
      Microtubules.

      Functionality is overloaded in each case to conserve energy. The largest-scale phenomena happen at the smallest level; tuning is distributed.

      Roger Penrose's work on this is probably the most advanced you'll find from a renowned academic.

    • That's like saying "transistors are all there is to information processing with a computer".

      Humanity is still in the process of understanding how a single neuron works let alone how a huge network of them operate. A good example is Lithium whose isotopes are identical chemically, but have a profound difference in effect on the brain. This is because it's not just the chemical reactions, but the speed at which reactions occur in its many interconnections to other neurons. Even a single neuron and its inter
  • I'd like to see them do this and then say, "None of the 1675 mice were harmed in making the 3D map."

  • how in the world did they convince rsilvergun to sit still and let them perform this test? ;-)

  • (didn't think this belonged in the summary of the actual article, but I wanted to share my reasons why I think it's important)
    People who read my comments on Slashdot know very well that I'm against so-called 'self driving cars', and ridicule so-called 'AI' as well, for one simple reason: the 'AI' behind SDCs is inherently, fatally flawed: It has no ability to reason, no cognitive ability whatsoever. Therefore the output you get from it is unpredictable in that if it's nonsensical (in a way that a human bra
    • AIs are driving well enough and RIs are driving poorly enough that it's not clear that your hypothesis is actually true. RIs are fatally flawed in that they have ego, and frequently prioritize this ego over basic rules of safety. RIs are also frequently multitasking, and prone to mis-prioritize rules for one task due to problems with unrelated tasks.

      While AIs are not self-training the way we like, they are built to work without ego, and thus never get angry or vengeful. They are also physically built with s

      • Human drivers aren't anywhere near as bad on the whole as you've been indoctrinated to believe, and so-called SDCs aren't anywhere near as good as you've been indoctrinated to believe, just as so-called 'AI' isn't anywhere near as good as the media and marketing departments have indoctrinated you to believe.
  • > Gigantic New 3D Map

    So far so good.

    > Traces Every Neuron In a Tiny Mouse Brain

    Nope, not even close. This is an atlas of mouse brain _regions_. The atlas does not contain information about individual neurons or their connections. The Allen Institute has done other neuron tracing experiments, but those have only sampled a small fraction (on the order of 1/1000) of the neurons in the brain, and in any case they are not included in this atlas.
  • What about non-tiny mice, like those dog-sized rats seen in the cafeteria.

  • They were so proud to have simulated a worms nervous system, then a fruit fly, and now a mouse brain.... what a great age to be witness to!

    • You may want to hold your horses. I believe this is only a visual map and not a complete simulation of a brain.

      The purpose of the map may possibly lead up to something of it. How much this will help us understand the human brain, if it's worth killing 1675 mice for some high-resolution map, or if we could have waited for better tech first (to only use a couple of mice for making this map) ... is a different matter.

Truly simple systems... require infinite testing. -- Norman Augustine

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