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Posted by Graham on Dec 6, '05 9:44 PM for everyone
By Philip Sherwell
Washington

It sounds like science fiction: a brain nurtured in a Petri dish learns to pilot a fighter plane as scientists develop a new breed of "living" computer. But in groundbreaking experiments in a Florida laboratory that is exactly what is happening.

The "brain", grown from 25,000 neural cells extracted from a single rat embryo, has been taught to fly an F-22 jet simulator by scientists at the University of Florida.

They hope their research into neural computation will help them develop sophisticated hybrid computers, with a thinking biological component.

One target is to install living computers in unmanned aircraft so they can be deployed on missions too dangerous for humans. It is also hoped that the research will provide the basis for developing new drugs to treat brain diseases such as epilepsy.

The brain-in-a-dish is the idea of Thomas DeMarse, 37, an assistant professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Florida. His work has been praised as a significant insight into the brain by leading US academics and scientific journals.

The 25,000 neurons were suspended in a specialised liquid to keep them alive and then laid across a grid of 60 electrodes in a small glass dish.

Under the microscope they looked at first like grains of sand, but soon the cells begin to connect to form what scientists are calling a "live computation device" (a brain). The electrodes measure and stimulate neural activity in the network, allowing researchers to study how the brain processes, transforms and stores information.

In the most striking experiment, the brain was linked to the jet simulator. Manipulated by the electrodes and a desktop computer, it was taught to control the flight path, even in mock hurricane-strength winds.

"When we first hooked them up, the plane 'crashed' all the time," Dr DeMarse said. "But over time, the neural network slowly adapts as the brain learns to control the pitch and roll of the aircraft. After a while, it produces a nice straight and level trajectory."

Previously, scientists have been able to monitor the activity of only a few neurons at a time, but Dr DeMarse and his team can study how thousands of cells conduct calculations together. But it is still a long way from a human brain.

"The goal is to study how cortical networks perform their neural computations. The implications are extremely important," Dr DeMarse said.

The first result could be to enable scientists to build living elements into traditional computers, enabling more flexible and varied means of solving problems. Although computers today are extremely powerful, they still lack the flexibility in working things out that humans take for granted.

Computers, for example, find it difficult to spot the difference between a table and a lamp if they are unfamiliar with them.

"The algorithms that living computers use are also extremely fault-tolerant," Dr DeMarse said. "A few neurons die off every day in humans without any noticeable drop in performance, and yet if the same were to happen in a traditional silicon-based computer the results would be catastrophic."

The work by Dr DeMarse and his team is attracting interest from scientists around the world.

The US National Science Foundation has awarded them a $US500,000 ($A640,000) grant to produce a mathematical model of how the neurons compute, and the US National Institute of Health is financing research into epilepsy.

-Telegraph



22 CommentsChronological   Reverse   Threaded
mildlot wrote on Dec 6, '05
I dunno...These things have a way of going hideously wrong...
bdred999 wrote on Dec 6, '05
Yeah, "The Brain That Wouldn't Die" is one of my favs but a jealous woman with no body is a long way from a mouse brain that never had one. I mean, as long as we don't tell the mouse brain about anything else, why not let it fly the plane?
gomigirl wrote on Dec 7, '05
mildlot said
I dunno...These things have a way of going hideously wrong...
"Attach My Head To Her Body!"

That's all we need to hear from lab-grown mouse brains!!!!!
jackfrost wrote on Dec 7, '05
If they can get this "mouse brain" to fly an F-22...

...they can get another group of these "brains" to run out government.

They certainly couldn't do any worst than the current brains running it.
gomigirl wrote on Dec 7, '05
They certainly couldn't do any worst than the current brains running it.
See? That's where you're wrong, assuming anyone or anything with any brains is running our government!!!!!
karimjin wrote on Dec 8, '05
Lab rat? Are we talking about Tony Blair here?

(For those oblivious. Lab is the abbr' of Mr T's party)
blighty wrote on Dec 8, '05
Shouldn't that be Lav Rat?
karimjin wrote on Dec 8, '05
blighty said
Shouldn't that be Lav Rat?
Isn't that a lesbian tennis player? Tarmina Lavratanova
blighty wrote on Dec 8, '05
Do you know why she couldn't compete in the Dutch Open?

She got her finger stuck in a dyke.
mildlot wrote on Dec 8, '05
blighty said
Shouldn't that be Lav Rat?
I thot Blair was Bush's lap rat.
blighty wrote on Dec 8, '05
La pratt, more like.
karimjin wrote on Dec 9, '05
blighty said
La pratt, more like.
hahahaha :))))
gomigirl wrote on Dec 9, '05
<<== caught myself laughing before I could stop!
gomigirl wrote on Dec 9, '05
blighty said
La pratt, more like.
Dammit! You did it to me again!!! More giggling!
karimjin wrote on Dec 9, '05
blighty said
La pratt, more like.
We'll have no more of this prattle, me boy!
Comment deleted at the request of the thread owner.
jackfrost wrote on Feb 27, '07
Oh Goodie!!! Looks like "Comment SPAM" has finally reached Multiply.
reinhilde wrote on Feb 28, '07
Poor Graham, they can't even let him hibernate in peace ;)

Comment deleted at the request of the author.
Comment deleted at the request of the author.
Comment deleted at the request of the author.
marklsn wrote on Dec 26, '11
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