In the past few months, artificial intelligence (AI) has suddenly seemed to come of age, with “generative AI” showing that AI was capable of being creative in ways that we thought was uniquely human. Whether it is writing, taking tests, creating art, inventing things, making convincing deepfake videos, or conducting searches on your behalf, AI is proving its potential. Even healthcare has figured out a surprising number of uses.
It's fun to speculate about which AI -- ChatGPT, Bard,
DeepMind, Sydney,
etc. – will prove “best,” but it turns out that “AI” as we’ve known it may
become outdated. Welcome to “organoid
intelligence” (OI).
Organoids at work. Credit: Smirnova, et. alia |
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I’d been vaguely aware of researchers working with lab-grown brain cells, but I was caught off-guard when Johns Hopkins University researchers announced organoid intelligence (a term they coined) as “the new frontier in biocomputing and intelligence-in-a-dish.” Their goal:
…we present a collaborative program to implement the vision of a multidisciplinary field of OI. This aims to establish OI as a form of genuine biological computing that harnesses brain organoids using scientific and bioengineering advances in an ethically responsible manner.
Their video:
“Computing and artificial intelligence have been
driving the technology revolution, but they are reaching a ceiling,” said
Thomas Hartung, the leader of the initiative.
“Biocomputing is an enormous effort of compacting computational power
and increasing its efficiency to push past our current technological limits.” Professor Hartung pointed out that only last
year a supercomputer exceeded the computational capacity of a single human brain
– “but using a million times more energy.”
“We are at a moment in time, where the technologies to
achieve actual biocomputing have matured," Professor Hartung told
CNET’s Eric Mack. "The hope is that some of the remarkable
functionalities of the human brain can be realized as OI, such as its ability
to take fast decisions based on incomplete and contradictive information
(intuitive thinking)…Computers and the brain are not the same, even though we
tried making computers more brain-like from the beginning of the computer age.
The promise of OI is to add some new qualities.”
It remains to be seen what those “new qualities” might
be.
Last year members of the team reported
getting a dish of living brain cells – an earlier form of organoids -- to teach
itself how to play Pong. “And I would say that replicating this experiment with
organoids already fulfills the basic definition of OI. From here on, it’s just
a matter of building the community, the tools, and the technologies to realize
OI’s full potential,” Professor Hartung believes.
The researchers are now working on how to “communicate”
with the organoids – sending information and reading what they re “thinking.” Professor
Hartung explained:
“We
developed a brain-computer interface device that is a kind of an EEG cap for
organoids…It is a flexible shell that is densely covered with tiny electrodes
that can both pick up signals from the organoid, and transmit signals to it,”
Still, we’re a long way to get existing arrangements
of organoids to true OI. "They are
too small, each containing about 50,000 cells. For OI, we would need to
increase this number to 10 million,” Professor Hartung explained.
“It
will take decades before we achieve the goal of something comparable to any
type of computer. But if we don’t start
creating funding programs for this, it will be much more difficult.”
The researchers are already excited about medical
applications. They can produce organoids
from adult tissues, and use them to study neurological disorders. According to Professor Hartung: “With OI, we
could study the cognitive aspects of neurological conditions as well, For
example, we could compare memory formation in organoids derived from healthy
people and from Alzheimer’s patients, and try to repair relative deficits. We
could also use OI to test whether certain substances, such as pesticides, cause
memory or learning problems.”
Study coauthor and co-investigator Lena Smirnova added:
We want to compare brain organoids from typically developed donors versus brain organoids from donors with autism. The tools we are developing towards biological computing are the same tools that will allow us to understand changes in neuronal networks specific for autism, without having to use animals or to access patients, so we can understand the underlying mechanisms of why patients have these cognition issues and impairments.If you were already worried about the ethical issues involved with computer-based AI approaching something that seems like sentience, imagine how much more troubling it will be when it is a bunch of human brain cells trying to convince you it thinks and feels. The research team claims to be aware of the issues. Professor Hartung says:
A key part of our vision is to develop OI in an ethical and socially responsible manner. For this reason, we have partnered with ethicists from the very beginning to establish an ‘embedded ethics’ approach. All ethical issues will be continuously assessed by teams made up of scientists, ethicists, and the public, as the research evolves.
Oh, OK, then.
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The researchers are definitely ambitious:
Ultimately, we aim toward a revolution in biological computing that could overcome many of the limitations of silicon-based computing and AI and have significant implications worldwide. Specifically, we anticipate OI-based biocomputing systems to allow faster decision-making (including on massive, incomplete, and heterogenous datasets), continuous learning during tasks, and greater energy and data efficiency. Furthermore, the development of “intelligence-in-a-dish” offers unparalleled opportunities to elucidate the biological basis of human cognition, learning, and memory, together with various disorders associated with cognitive deficits – potentially aiding the identification of novel therapeutic approaches to address major global unmet needs.
That’s the kind of revolution it will take to get to a
22nd healthcare system.
It’s been said before, including
by me, that if the 20th century was the century of computers,
the 21st century will be the century of biology, including genomics,
DNA computers, biocomputing, synthetic biology, and now, it would seem,
OI. By the end of the century we may
look back at today’s AI like someone in 1999 looked at radio in 1923: OI may be
to AI as the Internet was to early radio.
Or the organoids may never progress much past
Pong.
AI technology is evolving much faster than our culture
is ready for, and our laws
and regulations are trailing further. That’s the thing about technology:
just when you’ve gotten used to a new technology, something newer has come
along. So enjoy playing with ChatGPT, pat yourself on the back if you’ve
thought of ways to use AI in your business, but don’t stop looking ahead. Like at OI.
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