Skip to main content

Obama’s $100M BRAIN Initiative aims to cure Alzheimer’s, create cyborgs

BRAIN Initiative cyborgs
Image used with permission by copyright holder

When we start gallivanting around the globe in our Iron Man-like cyborg bodies, we may have President Obama to thank for making it all possible.

At a White House event Tuesday morning, Obama laid out the first details of a $100 million project that aims to revolutionize our understanding of the human brain while furthering American innovation and job growth.

Recommended Videos

Known as the Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative, the program stands to help researchers unlock cures for a variety of brain disorders, including Alzheimer’s, PTSD, epilepsy, autism, and traumatic brain injury. It could also lead to the kind of integration of man and machine so far only realized in the pages of science fiction.

“Imagine if no family had to feel helpless watching a loved one disappear behind the mask of Parkinson’s or struggle in the grip of epilepsy,” said Obama. “Imagine if we could reverse traumatic brain injury or PTSD for our veterans who are coming home. Imagine if someone with a prosthetic limb can now play the piano or throw a baseball as well as anybody else, because the wiring from the brain to that prosthetic is direct and triggered by what’s already happening in the patient’s mind.”

Obama characterized the BRAIN Initiative as “the next great American project,” on par with efforts to create “computer chips and GPS technology, the Internet,” all of which “grew out of government investments in basic research.” Even the founders of Google “got their early support from the National Science Foundation,” said Obama. It is these kinds of investments that will strengthen the U.S. economy for generations to come, he said. And if we don’t make them, some other country will.

“We can’t afford to miss these opportunities while the rest of the world races ahead. We have to seize them,” said Obama. “I don’t want the next job-creating discoveries to happen in China or India or Germany. I want them to happen right here, in the United States of America.”

Obama says he plans to include funding for the BRAIN Initiative in his 2014 fiscal budget, which he will release next week. Money for the program will come from the a variety of federal agencies, including the National Institutes of Health, DARPA, and the National Science Foundation.

Congress must approve Obama’s budget for the BRAIN Initiative to become a reality.

See more about the BRAIN Initiative in the White House-created infographic below:

wh_brain_mapping_infographic_2013_blog
Image used with permission by copyright holder

 Image via malinx/Shutterstock

Andrew Couts
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Features Editor for Digital Trends, Andrew Couts covers a wide swath of consumer technology topics, with particular focus on…
Rivian tops owner satisfaction survey, ahead of BMW and Tesla
The front three-quarter view of a 2022 Rivian against a rocky backdrop.

Can the same vehicle brand sit both at the bottom of owner ratings in terms of reliability and at the top in terms of overall owner satisfaction? When that brand is Rivian, the answer is a resonant yes.

Rivian ranked number one in satisfaction for the second year in a row, with owners especially giving their R1S and R1T electric vehicle (EV) high marks in terms of comfort, speed, drivability, and ease of use, according to the latest Consumer Reports (CR) owner satisfaction survey.

Read more
Hybrid vehicle sales reach U.S. record, but EV sales drop in third quarter
Tesla Cybertruck

The share of electric and hybrid vehicle sales continued to grow in the U.S. in the third quarter, the Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported this month.

Taken together, sales of purely electric vehicles (EVs), hybrids, and plug-in hybrids (PHEVs) represented 19.6% of total light-duty vehicle (LDV) sales last quarter, up from 19.1% in the second quarter.

Read more
Tesla’s ‘Model Q’ to arrive in 2025 at a price under $30K, Deutsche Bank says
teslas model q to arrive in 2025 at a price under 30k deutsche bank says y range desktop lhd v2

Only a short month and half ago, Tesla CEO Elon Musk told investors that outside of the just-released driverless robotaxi, a regular Tesla model priced at $25,000 would be “pointless” and “silly”.

"It would be completely at odds with what we believe,” Musk said.

Read more