BRAIN Initiative Challenges Researchers to Unlock Mysteries of Human Mind | The White House
Today at the White House, President Obama unveiled the “BRAIN”  Initiative—a bold new research effort to revolutionize our understanding of the  human mind and uncover new ways to treat, prevent, and cure brain disorders like  Alzheimer’s, schizophrenia, autism, epilepsy, and traumatic brain injury.
The BRAIN Initiative — short for Brain  Research through Advancing  Innovative Neurotechnologies —  builds on the President’s State of the Union call for historic  investments in research and development to fuel the innovation, job creation,  and economic growth that together create a thriving middle class.
The Initiative promises to accelerate the  invention of new technologies that will help researchers produce real-time  pictures of complex neural circuits and visualize the rapid-fire interactions of  cells that occur at the speed of thought. Such cutting-edge capabilities,  applied to both simple and complex systems, will open new doors to understanding  how brain function is linked to human behavior and learning, and the mechanisms  of brain disease.
In his remarks this morning, the President highlighted the BRAIN  Initiative as one of the Administration’s “Grand Challenges” – ambitious but achievable goals that  require advances in science and technology to accomplish. The President called  on companies, research universities, foundations, and philanthropies to join  with him in identifying and pursuing additional Grand Challenges of the 21st  century—challenges that can create the jobs and industries of the future while  improving lives.
In addition to fueling invaluable advances that improve lives, the  pursuit of Grand Challenges can create the jobs and industries of the  future.
That’s what happened when the Nation took on the Grand Challenge of  the Human Genome Project. As a result of that daunting but  focused endeavor, the cost of sequencing a single human genome has declined from  $100 million to $7,000, opening the door to personalized medicine.
Like sequencing the human genome, President Obama’s BRAIN Initiative  provides an opportunity to rally innovative capacities in every corner of the  Nation and leverage the diverse skills, tools, and resources from a variety of  sectors to have a lasting positive impact on lives, the  economy, and our national security.
That’s why we’re so excited that critical partners from within and  outside government are already stepping up to the President’s BRAIN Initiative  Grand Challenge.
The BRAIN Initiative is launching with approximately $100 million in  funding for research supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the  Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), and the National Science  Foundation (NSF) in the President’s Fiscal Year 2014 budget. 
Foundations and private research institutions are also investing in  the neuroscience that will advance the BRAIN Initiative.  The Allen  Institute for Brain Science, for example, will spend at least $60 million  annually to support projects related to this initiative.  The Kavli Foundation  plans to support BRAIN Initiative-related activities with approximately $4  million dollars per year over the next ten years.  The Howard Hughes Medical  Institute and the Salk Institute for Biological Studies will also dedicate  research funding for projects that support the BRAIN Initiative.
This is just the beginning. We hope many more foundations, Federal  agencies, philanthropists, non-profits, companies, and others will step up to  the President’s call to action. 

Dr. Francis Collins is Director of the National Institutes of  Health. Dr. Arati Prabhakar is Director of the Defense Advanced Research  Projects Agency
Follow new developments relating to the  BRAIN Initiative and other advances in science and technology at the White House  Office of Science and Technology Policy Blog and @whitehouseostp on Twitter. 
Note: Have questions about the BRAIN Initiative? Today, at 12:00 p.m. EDT, Tom Kalil, Innovation Advisor; Dr. Francis Collins, Director of National Institutes of Health; and Dr. Arati Prabhakar, Director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) will answer your questions. Ask on Twitter with #WHChat.
BRAIN Initiative Challenges Researchers to Unlock Mysteries of Human Mind | The White House


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