Sam Rodriques: What we'll learn about the brain in the next century
Sam Rodriques invents new technologies to help neuroscientists understand how the brain works. Full bio
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something about neuroscience.
how the brain works.
that we really want to understand.
about halfway, with water.
and you put the mouse in the jar, OK?
for a little while
the mouse gets tired
that's depression.
very sophisticated mathematical models
is the model for depression,
we have a lot of work to do."
problem in neuroscience.
in mice or monkeys
or what they're experiencing.
to understand emotion,
what's called motivated behavior,
when it really, really wants cheese."
spends about 5.5 billion dollars a year
no significant improvements in outcomes
in the past 40 years.
is basically due to the fact
for cancer or diabetes,
is just not sophisticated enough
or human brain disease.
why are we still using them?
electrical signals to each other.
how the brain works,
the electrical activity of these neurons.
really close to the neurons
recording device or a microscope.
and you can do it in monkeys,
put things into their brain
can't do that in humans, OK?
all these proxies.
pretty pictures like this,
of your brain light up
in different activities.
neural activity here.
is you're measuring, essentially,
but you get the idea, OK?
is you can do this --
these electrodes on your head, OK?
electrical activity.
the activity of neurons.
these electrical currents,
that these technologies that we have
that we want to understand --
kind of neuron deep in your brain
the resolution that you need
we're still stuck with the animals.
to be studying depression
sense that it's not possible
in healthy humans.
I think it could potentially be possible.
I don't have all the details.
with a kind of outline.
is a bit warmer that what you're used to.
that you know and love
were not always so good.
most things are surprisingly recognizable.
of Alzheimer's.
genetic therapies or drugs
before it begins.
that we had to figure out
connections through the skull
the electrical activity of neurons.
it had to be easy and risk-free.
would be OK with,
to get through the skull
the size of quarters.
someone do that to you.
rather than drilling these gigantic holes,
no thicker than a piece of hair.
was really for diagnosis --
of brain disorders
at the neural activity beneath the skull
these microscopic holes
for the patient.
like getting a shot.
that comes down on your head,
it was fast and extremely reliable,
the holes were there,
that one of your hairs was missing.
using lasers to drill holes in your skull,
shooting lasers into their eyes
it's not that big of a step.
that happened in the 2030s,
getting through the skull.
into the brain tissue itself.
you put something into the brain tissue,
a blood vessel and burst it,
we had invented these flexible probes
around blood vessels,
huge batteries of these probes
without any risk to them.
sort of to our surprise,
to things like ideas or emotion,
to things like Jennifer Aniston
have been that surprised.
spend most of their time thinking about?
studying neuroscience in individuals.
at the single cell level,
at the single human level.
to medical applications,
sick brains, not healthy brains.
your technology is,
into someone's brain
an electrical connection to the brain,
the brain up to a computer.
was very skeptical at first.
their brain up to their computers?
to send an email with a thought.
a picture with your eyes, OK?
that you choose to remember
on a hard drive somewhere,
between crazy and visionary
these laser-drilling systems, in 2043,
popped up left and right,
in neural interfacing technology.
if you were a neuroscientist,
essentially from off the street.
in some emotional task
the activity of their neurons
that they already had.
about what they were experiencing.
psychology and neuroscience
in the animals, was suddenly there.
of the neural basis for insight.
it all comes together, it clicks.
by two scientists in 2055,
prefrontal cortex,
trying to understand an idea,
would reorganize themselves --
activity here in orange --
in a way that leads to positive feedback.
at the things that make us human.
to major insights from medicine.
the neural activity
with these different mental diseases,
on the basis of their symptoms,
that we observed at the neural level.
dozens of different diseases,
at the start of the century,
to do with each other,
in different ways.
in retrospect,
all those different diseases
basically is what we were doing.
are the same way.
essentially at random,
which drugs would be most effective
improvement in outcomes.
to the year 2017.
or even far fetched.
see into the future.
or thousands of microscopic holes
to make any progress
or human diseases
at the electrical activity of neurons
on figuring out how to do that today.
to put down the mouse brain
and investment necessary
and human disease.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sam Rodriques - NeuroengineerSam Rodriques invents new technologies to help neuroscientists understand how the brain works.
Why you should listen
Sam Rodriques has designed a new nanofabrication method and a new approach to sensing neural activity with probes in the bloodstream, and his forthcoming technologies are aimed at understanding the spatial organization of cells in the brain and the transcriptional activity of neurons over time. He is a graduate student in Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with affiliations at the MIT Media Lab, the MIT Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT. He graduated summa cum laude with highest honors in Physics from Haverford College, where he worked on new methods for calculating quantum entanglement in multipartite quantum systems. He has received numerous national awards and fellowships to support his research, including the Hertz Foundation Graduate Fellowship, an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship and a Churchill Scholarship.
Sam Rodriques | Speaker | TED.com