Slashdot Mirror


Effort to Create Virtual Brain Begins

bryan8m writes "An IBM supercomputer running on 22.8 teraflops of processing power will be involved in an effort to create the first computer simulation of the entire human brain. From the article: 'The hope is that the virtual brain will help shed light on some aspects of human cognition, such as perception, memory and perhaps even consciousness.' It should also help us understand brain malfunctions and 'observe the electrical code our brains use to represent the world.'"

2 of 454 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Thoughts on virtual thoughts by venicebeach · · Score: 5, Informative

    All it takes to simulate a human brain is 22.8 teraflops? I thought I was smarter than that.

    You are.

    According to the Business Week article this thing will be simulating about 10 thousand neurons. The human brain has about 100 billion neurons. This will be simulating a small section of cortex, not an entire brain. The goal seems to be to understand how cortical columns work, not to create a simulated mind. They actually will not even have enough "neurons" to match one human cortical column, but will probably still learn alot about the circuitry....

  2. Re:Thoughts on virtual thoughts by Somato_gastric · · Score: 5, Informative

    Hold your horses! There is abundant evidence that single neurons can perform more complex operations than a mere 'sigmoid fuunction'. That is a working approximation that can be useful from the point of view of simulations but that is all.

    Single neurons can potentially perform computations at the level of the of the passive cable equation. At the level of active membrane properties when added to those passive canle equation solutions. At the level of genetic instructions becoming activated in the nucleus and dendrites in response to activity. And finally the plasticity or learning rules that neurons use are not only computational very important but probably quite varied from brain region to region. Spike timing dependent plasticity for example allows the brain to pick out persistent correlations within highly noisy inputs. None of this is included in the impoverised neural-network viewpoint of 'sigmoids'

    The real question is why are they doing this? Markram is a top researcher and knows what he is doing. But i quesiton the motivations of big blue. i wouldnt be suprised if they didnt give two hoots about the science but rather are only doing this so that they can get the kind of publicity that posts on slashdot bring. Remember 'Deep Blue'? Lets hope they dont treat Markram like they did Kasparov