The Si elegans Project – The Challenges and Prospects of Emulating Caenorhabditis elegans

Egileak: Axel Blau, Frank Callaly, Seamus Cawley, Aedan Coffey, Alessandro De Mauro, Gorka Epelde, Lorenzo Ferrara, Finn Krewer, Carlo Liberale, Pedro Machado, Gregory Maclair, Thomas-Martin McGinnity, Fearghal Morgan, Andoni Mujika, Alessandro Petrushin, Gautier

Data: 30.07.2014


PDF

Abstract

Caenorhabditis elegans features one of the simplest nervous systems in nature, yet its biological information processing still evades our complete understanding. The position of its 302 neurons and almost its entire connectome has been mapped. However, there is only sparse knowledge on how its nervous system codes for its rich behavioral repertoire. The EU-funded Si elegans project aims at reverse-engineering C. elegans‘ nervous system function by its emulation. 302 in parallel interconnected field-programmable gate array (FPGA) neurons will interact through their sensory and motor neurons with a biophysically accurate soft-body representation of the nematode in a virtual behavioral arena. Each FPGA will feature its own reprogrammable neural response model that researchers world-wide will be able to modify to test their neuroscientific hypotheses. In a closed-feedback loop, any sensory experience of the virtual nematode in its virtual environment will be processed by sensory and subsequently interconnected neurons to result in motor commands at neuromuscular junctions at the hardware-software interface to actuate virtual muscles of the virtual nematode. Postural changes in the virtual world will lead to a new sensory experience and thus close the loop. In this contribution we present the overall concepts with special focus on the virtual embodiment of the nematode. For further information and recent news please visit http://www.si-elegans.eu.

BIB_text

@Article {
author = {Axel Blau, Frank Callaly, Seamus Cawley, Aedan Coffey, Alessandro De Mauro, Gorka Epelde, Lorenzo Ferrara, Finn Krewer, Carlo Liberale, Pedro Machado, Gregory Maclair, Thomas-Martin McGinnity, Fearghal Morgan, Andoni Mujika, Alessandro Petrushin, Gautier },
title = {The Si elegans Project – The Challenges and Prospects of Emulating Caenorhabditis elegans},
pages = {436-438},
volume = {8606},
keywds = {

Biomimicry, Brain-Inspired Computation, Nervous System Emulation, Soft Body Simulation, Virtual World Embodiment, Neurocomputational Response Models on FPGAs


}
abstract = {

Caenorhabditis elegans features one of the simplest nervous systems in nature, yet its biological information processing still evades our complete understanding. The position of its 302 neurons and almost its entire connectome has been mapped. However, there is only sparse knowledge on how its nervous system codes for its rich behavioral repertoire. The EU-funded Si elegans project aims at reverse-engineering C. elegans‘ nervous system function by its emulation. 302 in parallel interconnected field-programmable gate array (FPGA) neurons will interact through their sensory and motor neurons with a biophysically accurate soft-body representation of the nematode in a virtual behavioral arena. Each FPGA will feature its own reprogrammable neural response model that researchers world-wide will be able to modify to test their neuroscientific hypotheses. In a closed-feedback loop, any sensory experience of the virtual nematode in its virtual environment will be processed by sensory and subsequently interconnected neurons to result in motor commands at neuromuscular junctions at the hardware-software interface to actuate virtual muscles of the virtual nematode. Postural changes in the virtual world will lead to a new sensory experience and thus close the loop. In this contribution we present the overall concepts with special focus on the virtual embodiment of the nematode. For further information and recent news please visit http://www.si-elegans.eu.


}
isbn = { 978-3-319-09434-2 (Print},
date = {2014-07-30},
year = {2014},
}
Vicomtech

Gipuzkoako Zientzia eta Teknologia Parkea,
Mikeletegi Pasealekua 57,
20009 Donostia / San Sebastián (Espainia)

+(34) 943 309 230

Zorrotzaurreko Erribera 2, Deusto,
48014 Bilbo (Espainia)

close overlay

Jokaeraren araberako publizitateko cookieak beharrezkoak dira eduki hau kargatzeko

Onartu jokaeraren araberako publizitateko cookieak