The Brain
Activity Map
Hard cell
An ambitious project to map the brain is in the works. Possibly too
ambitious
The Economist Mar 9th 2013
NEWS of what protagonists hope will be America ’s next
big science project continues to dribble out. A leak to the New York Times, published on February 17th, let the
cat out of the bag, with a report that Barack Obama’s administration is
thinking of sponsoring what will be known as the Brain Activity Map. And on
March 7th several of those protagonists published a manifesto for the project
in Science.
The purpose of BAM is to change the scale at which
the brain is understood. At the moment, neuroscience operates at two
disconnected levels. The higher one, where the dimensions of features are
measured in centimetres, has many techniques at its disposal, notably
functional magnetic-resonance imaging (fMRI), which measures changes in
tissues’ fuel consumption. This lets researchers see which bits of the brain
are active in particular tasks—as long as those tasks can be performed by a
person lying down inside a scanner.
At the other end of the scale, where features are
measured in microns, lots of research has been done on how individual nerve
cells work, how messages are sent from one to another, and how the connections
between cells strengthen and weaken as memories are formed. Between these two,
though, all is darkness. It is like trying to navigate America with an
atlas that shows the states, the big cities and the main highways, and has a
few street maps of local neighbourhoods, but displays nothing in between. BAM,
if all goes well, will yield plans of entire towns and villages, and start to
fill in the road network. It will also, to push the analogy to breaking point,
let a user look at actual traffic flows on the roads in question, and even
manipulate the road signs, in order to understand how particular communities
work.
The mappers’ aim is to find out how nerve cells
collaborate to process information. That means looking at the connections
between hundreds, thousands and even millions of adjacent cells—and doing so,
crucially, while those cells are still alive, rather than after they have been
sliced and diced for microscopic examination.
[Keep in mind that these millions of neurons are
out of some 100,000,000,000 neurons in the brain – a proportion of 1 to
100,000. So even if this overly ambitious project succeeds, it will be
light-years from mapping the brain tout courte. D.G.]
This will require a new set of tools. And the guts
of the BAM proposal are that the American taxpayer should provide those tools.
It is thus no coincidence that the lead author of the paper, Paul Alivisatos,
the director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, is a materials
scientist, not a neuroscientist. Dr Alivisatos and his ten colleagues would
like their new tools to be able to record, simultaneously, the activity of
millions of nerve cells. Then, having done the recording, they would like a
second toolkit that lets them manipulate each cell at will, to see what effect
that has on the rest of the circuit. Finally, to handle the unprecedented
amounts of data that the first and second steps will generate, they would like
a new set of computing hardware and software.
A modest proposal, then. And one which is inducing
polite scepticism from many neuroscientists who are not part of the charmed
circle, and who fear their subject is about to be sacrificed to a juggernaut.
Such scepticism is reasonable. The third
part of the project, the computer side, should be doable. That is just a
question of pushing harder in a direction things are, in any case, going. How
you would do the first two, though, is anybody’s guess—and Dr Alivisatos and
his colleagues are pretty sketchy about the details.
Thinking big, thinking small
What ideas there are draw heavily on the nascent
field of nanotechnology. This is Dr Alivisatos’s particular province, and also
that of the Kavli Foundation, which exists “to advance fundamental research in
the fields of astrophysics, nanoscience, neuroscience and theoretical physics”.
A brain map would push two of those buttons, which accounts for the fact that
five of the manifesto’s authors work for institutes sponsored by this
foundation. But any successes that nanotechnology has enjoyed so far have been
small beer compared with the devices that would be needed to interrogate nerve
cells, record the results and transmit them back to base, let alone tell those
nerve cells what to do.
The protagonists would, they say, build up slowly,
using humbler creatures than human beings as experimental subjects to start
with. This was the approach taken by the Human Genome Project, which began with
bacteria and yeast, progressed to worms, flies and mice, and only then tackled
people. But the analogy is not quite a fair one. When the genome project
started, genomicists already had a basic understanding of how to go about it.
That understanding was vastly refined and improved by the application of
several billion dollars. But it was there from the beginning.
Going from existing methods of recording and
manipulating cell activity, which rely on large electrodes, often connected to
the outside world by physical wires, to the massively parallel, wireless system
envisaged by Dr Alivisatos, is a different proposition. It may be possible. But
it requires a leap of faith. The next few weeks will reveal whether
that faith is shared by a cash-strapped president.