This is Clara.
This is an article from SEED magazine
http://www.seedmagazine.com/news/2008/03/out_of_the_blue.php
It's tagline is,"Can a thinking, remembering, decision-making, biologically accurate brain be built from a supercomputer?" It raises some pretty cool issues about computational neuroscience and modeling.
Here is a teaser for y'all:
"After assembling a three-dimensional model of 10,000 virtual neurons, the scientists began feeding the simulation electrical impulses, which were designed to replicate the currents constantly rippling through a real rat brain. Because the model focused on one particular kind of neural circuit—a neocortical column in the somatosensory cortex of a two-week-old rat—the scientists could feed the supercomputer the same sort of electrical stimulation that a newborn rat would actually experience.
It didn't take long before the model reacted. After only a few electrical jolts, the artificial neural circuit began to act just like a real neural circuit. Clusters of connected neurons began to fire in close synchrony: the cells were wiring themselves together. Different cell types obeyed their genetic instructions. The scientists could see the cellular looms flash and then fade as the cells wove themselves into meaningful patterns. Dendrites reached out to each other, like branches looking for light. "This all happened on its own," Markram says. "It was entirely spontaneous." For the Blue Brain team, it was a thrilling breakthrough. After years of hard work, they were finally able to watch their make-believe brain develop, synapse by synapse. The microchips were turning themselves into a mind."
Comments (1)
This is definitely an amazing idea that scientists potentially can create a machine that mirrors the brain and all of its processes. However, it does seem doubtful to me that it is possible to put “self-consciousness” into a machine…but maybe I’m being too close-minded. How could that be possible? I guess if the scientists are able to get all the intricate ins and outs of the brain figured out and then how to translate them into a computer/machine, it might be. It is very fascinating that these scientists have built an exact replica of a rat neocortical column and are now able to simulate neuronal firing in a real neural circuit. Furthermore, the robot seems to be the most crucial part of this entire experiment. I wonder what other experiments might be made better with the help of this device. Although this has only been done to a rat brain so far, would it ever make it to the human brain. If so, I feel like it would have a sort of Frankenstein-esk aspect associated with it. What if scientists are eventually able to create a “brain” that has self-consciousness? Would it be able to learn behavior and emotion from others as normal humans do today? It’s both scary and very exciting to think about…
Posted by Connell Owings | April 8, 2008 9:12 PM
Posted on April 8, 2008 21:12