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The Most Detailed 3D Reconstruction of Human Brain Tissue (interestingengineering.com) 25

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Interesting Engineering: Imagine exploring the intricate world within a single cubic millimeter of human brain tissue. It might seem insignificant, but within that tiny space lies a universe of complexity -- 57,000 individual cells, 230 millimeters of blood vessels, and a staggering 150 million synapses, the junctions where neurons communicate. All this information translates to a mind-boggling 1,400 terabytes of data. That's the kind of groundbreaking achievement researchers from Harvard and Google have just accomplished.

Leading the charge at Harvard is Professor Jeff Lichtman, a renowned expert in brain structure. Partnering with Google AI, Lichtman's team has co-created the most detailed 3D reconstruction of a human brain fragment to date. This intricate map, published in Science, offers an unprecedented view of the human temporal cortex, the region responsible for memory and other higher functions. Envision a piece of brain tissue roughly half the size of a rice grain but magnified to reveal every cell and its web of neural connections in vivid detail. This remarkable feat is the culmination of nearly a decade of collaboration between Harvard and Google. Lichtman's expertise in electron microscopy imaging is combined with Google's cutting-edge AI algorithms. [...]

The newly published map in Science reveals previously unseen details of brain structure. One such discovery is a rare but powerful set of axons, each connected by up to 50 synapses, potentially influencing a significant number of neighboring neurons. The team also encountered unexpected structures, like a small number of axons forming intricate whorls. Since the sample came from a patient with epilepsy, it's unclear if these formations are specific to the condition or simply uncommon occurrences.

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The Most Detailed 3D Reconstruction of Human Brain Tissue

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  • Why use Abby Normal's brain?

  • I wonder when we'll be able to make a 1 mm^3 stack of M.2 cards hold that much data. I just checked: I can get a 1U unit which will hold all that. I found 8 TB M.2 cards so we'd need 175 of those. How big would that be? Would just the cards fit in a shoe box?

    Let's go with that and do some back of the envelope estimates. I'm guessing that's 10cm x 15cm x 30cm. That's 4,500 cm^3 or 4.5e6 mm^3. If we follow Moore's Law and assume storage density doubles every 18 months, we need 22 doublings or 33 years. Maybe

  • They drew Trump's brain which is just a void with a solitary brain cell in the middle.

  • ... the worm?

  • It was rather interesting to follow neurons, seeing them wrap in a loop around Glial cells as they are being shortened, how that looked on the MRI and what structures were around it. I would have liked to have worked out how to pan the other 2 axis in 3d space, but with left clicking and mouse wheel I could still "get in there" so to speak.

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