Supercomputer models one second of human brain activity
Supercomputer models one second of human brain activity
The most accurate simulation of the human brain ever has
been carried out, but a single second’s worth of activity took one of the
world’s largest supercomputers 40 minutes to calculate
Men’s and women's brains are wired differently
The simulation will help scientists create more accurate
models in future
By Matthew Sparkes
10:04AM GMT 13 Jan 2014
The most accurate simulation of the human brain to date
has been carried out in a Japanese supercomputer, with a single second’s worth
of activity from just one per cent of the complex organ taking one of the
world’s most powerful supercomputers 40 minutes to calculate.
Researchers used the K computer in Japan, currently the
fourth most powerful in the world, to simulate human brain activity. The
computer has 705,024 processor cores and 1.4 million GB of RAM, but still took
40 minutes to crunch the data for just one second of brain activity.
The project, a joint enterprise between Japanese research
group RIKEN, the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate
University and Forschungszentrum Jülich, an interdisciplinary research center
based in Germany, was the largest neuronal network simulation to date.
It used the open-source Neural Simulation Technology
(NEST) tool to replicate a network consisting of 1.73 billion nerve cells
connected by 10.4 trillion synapses.
While significant in size, the simulated network
represented just one per cent of the neuronal network in the human brain.
Rather than providing new insight into the organ the project’s main goal was to
test the limits of simulation technology and the capabilities of the K
computer.
Through their efforts, the researchers were able to
gather invaluable knowledge that will guide the construction of new simulation
software. In addition, their achievement offers neuroscientists a glimpse of
what can be achieved by using the next generation of computers - so-called
exascale computing.
Exascale computers are those which can carry out a
quintillion floating point operations per second, which is an important
milestone in computing as it is thought to be the same power as a human brain
and therefore opens the door to potential real-time simulation of the organ’s
activity.
Currently there is no computer in existence that
powerful, but Intel has said that it aims to have such a machine in operation
by 2018.
“If petascale computers like the K computer are capable
of representing one per cent of the network of a human brain today, then we
know that simulating the whole brain at the level of the individual nerve cell
and its synapses will be possible with exascale computers - hopefully available
within the next decade,” said one of the scientists, Markus Diesmann.
Comments
Post a Comment