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Interesting paper on WBE

 

 

 

 

 

Conclusions

It appears feasible within the foreseeable future to store the full connectivity or even

multistate compartment models of all neurons in the brain within the working memory of a

large computing system.

 

Achieving the performance needed for real‐time emulation appears to be a more serious

computational problem. However, the uncertainties in this estimate are also larger since it

depends on the currently unknown number of required states, the computational complexity

of updating them (which may be amenable to drastic improvements if algorithmic shortcuts

can be found), the presumed limitation of computer hardware improvements to a Moore’s

law growth rate, and the interplay between improving processors and improving

parallelism16. A rough conclusion would nevertheless be that if electrophysiological models

are enough, full human brain emulations should be possible before mid‐century. Animal

models of simple mammals would be possible one to two decades before this

 

Discussion

 

As this review shows, WBE on the neuronal/synaptic level requires relatively modest

increases in microscopy resolution, a less trivial development of automation for scanning and

image processing, a research push at the problem of inferring functional properties of

neurons and synapses, and relatively business‐as‐usual development of computational

neuroscience models and computer hardware. This assumes that this is the appropriate level

of description of the brain, and that we find ways of accurately simulating the subsystems

that occur on this level. Conversely, pursuing this research agenda will also help detect

whether there are low‐level effects that have significant influence on higher level systems,

requiring an increase in simulation and scanning resolution.

 

There do not appear to exist any obstacles to attempting to emulate an invertebrate organism

today. We are still largely ignorant of the networks that make up the brains of even modestly

complex organisms. Obtaining detailed anatomical information of a small brain appears

entirely feasible and useful to neuroscience, and would be a critical first step towards WBE.

Such a project would serve as both a proof of concept and a test bed for further development

 

Gradual replacement

 

Scanning might also occur in the form of gradual replacement, as piece after piece of the brain

is replaced by an artificial neural system interfacing with the brain and maintaining the same

functional interactions as the lost pieces. Eventually only the artificial system remains, and

the information stored can be moved if desired (Morevec, 1988). While gradual replacement

might assuage fears of loss of consciousness and identity26 it appears technically very

complex as the scanning system not only has to scan a living, changing organism but also

interface seamlessly with it (at least on the submicron scale) while working. The technology

needed to achieve it could definitely be used for scanning by disassembly.

 

Gradual replacement is therefore not likely as a first form of brain emulation scanning (though in practice it may eventually become the preferred method if non‐destructive scanning is not

possible).

 

It is sometimes suggested that extending the brain through interfaces with external software

might achieve a form of transfer where more and more of the entire person is stored outside

the brain, possibly reaching the point where the brain is no longer essential for the composite

person. However, this would not be brain emulation per se but rather a transition to a posthuman state

 

http://www.fhi.ox.ac.uk/brain-emulation-roadmap-report.pdf


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