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Monday, February 18, 2013
Obama to Announce 10-Year Human Brain Mapping Project
The Obama administration is planning a decade-long scientific effort to examine the workings of the human brain and build a comprehensive map of its activity, seeking to do for the brain what the Human Genome Project did for genetics.
The project, which the administration has been looking to unveil as 
early as March, will include federal agencies, private foundations and 
teams of neuroscientists and nanoscientists in a concerted effort to 
advance the knowledge of the brain’s billions of neurons and gain 
greater insights into perception, actions and, ultimately, 
consciousness. 
Scientists with the highest hopes for the project also see it as a way 
to develop the technology essential to understanding diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, as well as to find new therapies for a variety of mental illnesses. 
Moreover, the project holds the potential of paving the way for advances in artificial intelligence.
The project, which could ultimately cost billions of dollars, is 
expected to be part of the president’s budget proposal next month. And, 
four scientists and representatives of research institutions said they 
had participated in planning for what is being called the Brain Activity
 Map project. 
The details are not final, and it is not clear how much federal money 
would be proposed or approved for the project in a time of fiscal 
constraint or how far the research would be able to get without 
significant federal financing. 
In his State of the Union address, President Obama cited brain research as an example of how the government should “invest in the best ideas.”
“Every dollar we invested to map the human genome returned $140 to our 
economy — every dollar,” he said. “Today our scientists are mapping the 
human brain to unlock the answers to Alzheimer’s. They’re developing 
drugs to regenerate damaged organs, devising new materials to make 
batteries 10 times more powerful. Now is not the time to gut these 
job-creating investments in science and innovation.” 
Story C. Landis, the director of the National Institute of Neurological 
Disorders and Stroke, said that when she heard Mr. Obama’s speech, she 
thought he was referring to an existing National Institutes of Health
 project to map the static human brain. “But he wasn’t,” she said. “He 
was referring to a new project to map the active human brain that the 
N.I.H. hopes to fund next year.” 
Indeed, after the speech, Francis S. Collins, the director of the 
National Institutes of Health, may have inadvertently confirmed the plan
 when he wrote in a Twitter message: “Obama mentions the #NIH Brain Activity Map in #SOTU.” 
A spokesman for the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy declined to comment about the project. 
The initiative, if successful, could provide a lift for the economy. 
“The Human Genome Project was on the order of about $300 million a year 
for a decade,” said George M. Church,
 a Harvard University molecular biologist who helped create that project
 and said he was helping to plan the Brain Activity Map project. “If you
 look at the total spending in neuroscience and nanoscience that might 
be relative to this today, we are already spending more than that. We 
probably won’t spend less money, but we will probably get a lot more 
bang for the buck.” 
Scientists involved in the planning said they hoped that federal 
financing for the project would be more than $300 million a year, which 
if approved by Congress would amount to at least $3 billion over the 10 
years. 
The Human Genome Project cost $3.8 billion. It was begun in 1990 and its
 goal, the mapping of the complete human genome, or all the genes in 
human DNA, was achieved ahead of schedule, in April 2003. A federal 
government study of the impact of the project indicated that it returned
 $800 billion by 2010. 
The advent of new technology that allows scientists to identify firing 
neurons in the brain has led to numerous brain research projects around 
the world. Yet the brain remains one of the greatest scientific 
mysteries. 
Composed of roughly 100 billion neurons that each electrically “spike” 
in response to outside stimuli, as well as in vast ensembles based on 
conscious and unconscious activity, the human brain is so complex that 
scientists have not yet found a way to record the activity of more than a
 small number of neurons at once, and in most cases that is done 
invasively with physical probes. 
But a group of nanotechnologists and neuroscientists say they believe 
that technologies are at hand to make it possible to observe and gain a 
more complete understanding of the brain, and to do it less intrusively. 
In June in the journal Neuron, six leading scientists proposed pursuing a number of new approaches for mapping the brain. 
One possibility is to build a complete model map of brain activity by 
creating fleets of molecule-size machines to noninvasively act as 
sensors to measure and store brain activity at the cellular level. The 
proposal envisions using synthetic DNA as a storage mechanism for brain 
activity. 
“Not least, we might expect novel understanding and therapies for diseases such as schizophrenia and autism,”
 wrote the scientists, who include Dr. Church; Ralph J. Greenspan, the 
associate director of the Kavli Institute for Brain and Mind at the 
University of California, San Diego; A. Paul Alivisatos, the director of
 the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; Miyoung Chun, a molecular 
geneticist who is the vice president for science programs at the Kavli 
Foundation; Michael L. Roukes, a physicist at the California Institute 
of Technology; and Rafael Yuste, a neuroscientist at Columbia 
University.  
The Obama initiative is markedly different from a recently announced 
European project that will invest 1 billion euros in a Swiss-led effort 
to build a silicon-based “brain.” The project seeks to construct a 
supercomputer simulation using the best research about the inner 
workings of the brain.        
Critics, however, say the simulation will be built on knowledge that is still theoretical, incomplete or inaccurate. 
The Obama proposal seems to have evolved in a manner similar to the 
Human Genome Project, scientists said. “The genome project arguably 
began in 1984, where there were a dozen of us who were kind of 
independently moving in that direction but didn’t really realize there 
were other people who were as weird as we were,” Dr. Church said. 
However, a number of scientists said that mapping and understanding the 
human brain presented a drastically more significant challenge than 
mapping the genome. 
“It’s different in that the nature of the question is a much more 
intricate question,” said Dr. Greenspan, who said he is involved in the 
brain project. “It was very easy to define what the genome project’s 
goal was. In this case, we have a more difficult and fascinating 
question of what are brainwide activity patterns and ultimately how do 
they make things happen?” 
The initiative will be organized by the Office of Science and Technology
 Policy, according to scientists who have participated in planning 
meetings. 
The National Institutes of Health, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the National Science Foundation
 will also participate in the project, the scientists said, as will 
private foundations like the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in Chevy 
Chase, Md., and the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle. 
A meeting held on Jan. 17 at the California Institute of Technology was 
attended by the three government agencies, as well as neuroscientists, 
nanoscientists and representatives from Google, Microsoft and Qualcomm. 
According to a summary of the meeting, it was held to determine whether 
computing facilities existed to capture and analyze the vast amounts of 
data that would come from the project. The scientists and technologists 
concluded that they did. 
They also said that a series of national brain “observatories” should be
 created as part of the project, like astronomical observatories.
By JOHN MARKOFF from NY Times
By JOHN MARKOFF from NY Times
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