Fav of CanadaFav of Canada
  • Home
  • News
  • Money
  • Living
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sci-Tech
  • Travel
  • More
    • Sports
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest Canada's trends and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On

Canadian man finds father’s wartime signature in Dutch church: ‘Amazing’

May 9, 2025

‘Am I going to be believed?’ What IPV support workers in N.B. are hearing from survivors

May 9, 2025

Recall issued over ineffective radon detectors sold online: Health Canada

May 9, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Fav of CanadaFav of Canada
  • Home
  • News
  • Money
  • Living
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sci-Tech
  • Travel
  • More
    • Sports
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
Fav of CanadaFav of Canada
You are at:Home » Mouse watches The Matrix, scientists map brain that looks like a ‘galaxy’
Health

Mouse watches The Matrix, scientists map brain that looks like a ‘galaxy’

By favofcanada.caApril 10, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram WhatsApp Email Tumblr LinkedIn
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp Email

Thanks to a mouse watching clips from The Matrix, scientists have created the largest functional map of a brain to date – a diagram of the wiring connecting 84,000 neurons as they fire off messages.

Using a piece of that mouse’s brain about the size of a poppy seed, the researchers identified those neurons and traced how they communicated via branch-like fibers through a surprising 500 million junctions called synapses.

The massive dataset, published Wednesday by the journal Nature, marks a step toward unraveling the mystery of how our brains work. The data, assembled in a 3D reconstruction colored to delineate different brain circuitry, is open to scientists worldwide for additional research – and for the simply curious to take a peek.

“It definitely inspires a sense of awe, just like looking at pictures of the galaxies,” said Forrest Collman of the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle, one of the project’s leading researchers. “You get a sense of how complicated you are. We’re looking at one tiny part … of a mouse’s brain and the beauty and complexity that you can see in these actual neurons and the hundreds of millions of connections between them.”

How we think, feel, see, talk and move are due to neurons, or nerve cells, in the brain – how they’re activated and send messages to each other. Scientists have long known those signals move from one neuron along fibers called axons and dendrites, using synapses to jump to the next neuron. But there’s less known about the networks of neurons that perform certain tasks and how disruptions of that wiring could play a role in Alzheimer’s, autism or other disorders.

“You can make a thousand hypotheses about how brain cells might do their job but you can’t test those hypotheses unless you know perhaps the most fundamental thing – how are those cells wired together,” said Allen Institute scientist Clay Reid, who helped pioneer electron microscopy to study neural connections.

With the new project, a global team of more than 150 researchers mapped neural connections that Collman compares to tangled pieces of spaghetti winding through part of the mouse brain responsible for vision.

The first step: Show a mouse video snippets of sci-fi movies, sports, animation and nature.

Receive the latest medical news and health information delivered to you every Sunday.

Get weekly health news

Receive the latest medical news and health information delivered to you every Sunday.

A team at Baylor College of Medicine did just that, using a mouse engineered with a gene that makes its neurons glow when they’re active. The researchers used a laser-powered microscope to record how individual cells in the animal’s visual cortex lit up as they processed the images flashing by.

Next, scientists at the Allen Institute analyzed that small piece of brain tissue, using a special tool to shave it into more than 25,000 layers, each far thinner than a human hair. With electron microscopes, they took nearly 100 million high-resolution images of those sections, illuminating those spaghetti-like fibers and painstakingly reassembling the data in 3D.

Finally, Princeton University scientists used artificial intelligence to trace all that wiring and “paint each of the individual wires a different color so that we can identify them individually,” Collman explained.

They estimated that microscopic wiring, if laid out, would measure more than five kilometres.. Importantly, matching up all that anatomy with the activity in the mouse’s brain as it watched movies allowed researchers to trace how the circuitry worked.

The Princeton researchers also created digital 3D copies of the data that other scientists can use in developing new studies.

Could this kind of mapping help scientists eventually find treatments for brain diseases? The researchers call it a foundational step, like how the Human Genome Project that provided the first gene mapping eventually led to gene-based treatments. Mapping a full mouse brain is one next goal.

“The technologies developed by this project will give us our first chance to really identify some kind of abnormal pattern of connectivity that gives rise to a disorder,” another of the project’s leading researchers, Princeton neuroscientist and computer scientist Sebastian Seung, said in a statement.

The work “marks a major leap forwards and offers an invaluable community resource for future discoveries,” wrote Harvard neuroscientists Mariela Petkova and Gregor Schuhknecht, who weren’t involved in the project.

The huge and publicly shared data “will help to unravel the complex neural networks underlying cognition and behavior,” they added.


&copy 2025 The Canadian Press

Related Articles

Measles cases show signs of exponential growth in western Canada, say health experts

By favofcanada.caMay 8, 2025

If measles keeps spreading, Canada may lose 30-year elimination status: PHAC

By favofcanada.caMay 7, 2025

WeightWatchers files for bankruptcy protection as weight-loss drugs dominate

By favofcanada.caMay 7, 2025

Study finds no evidence to support New Brunswick’s ‘mystery brain disease’

By favofcanada.caMay 7, 2025

Ozempic microdosing: Weight-loss hack or just a placebo?

By favofcanada.caMay 6, 2025

Wife of Quebec man who chose assisted death describes ER stay as coroner’s inquest opens

By favofcanada.caMay 6, 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

‘Am I going to be believed?’ What IPV support workers in N.B. are hearing from survivors

By favofcanada.caMay 9, 2025

EDITOR’S NOTE: As part of our series looking at the issue of intimate partner violence…

Recall issued over ineffective radon detectors sold online: Health Canada

May 9, 2025

Air Canada’s U.S. bookings to drop by ‘low teens’ in next 6 months: CEO

May 9, 2025

World junior complainant returns to stand for 6th straight day

May 9, 2025
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Our Picks

As Canada and Europe look to partner on defence, what could that look like?

By favofcanada.caMay 9, 2025

Toronto pedestrian struck, killed by 2 vehicles that fled the scene: police

By favofcanada.caMay 9, 2025

Over a year after Bill 124 was reversed, some Ontario workers still wait for payments

By favofcanada.caMay 9, 2025
About Us
About Us

Fav of Canada is your one-stop website for the latest Canada's trends and updates, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Email Us: [email protected]
Contact: +44 7741 486006

Our Picks

Canadian man finds father’s wartime signature in Dutch church: ‘Amazing’

May 9, 2025

‘Am I going to be believed?’ What IPV support workers in N.B. are hearing from survivors

May 9, 2025

Recall issued over ineffective radon detectors sold online: Health Canada

May 9, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest Canada's trends and updates directly to your inbox.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest TikTok
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 Fav of Canada. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.