DARPA brain implant for PTSD, brain injuries and other neurological and psychiatric disorders researched

Conceptual model of brain implant for PTSD and TBI, Courtesy of MGH and Draper Labs
Investigators at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) today announced a new research initiative designed to treat post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), traumatic brain injury (TBI), and other neurological and psychiatric disorders. The goal of the project, which is made possible by a $30 million grant from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), is to design and build a first-of-its-kind implantable deep brain stimulation (DBS) device which will monitor signals across multiple brain structures in real time. Based on the monitored activity, it will then deliver stimulation to key areas to alleviate symptoms related to neuropsychiatric disorders such asPTSD, severe depression, drug addiction, and TBI. “Deep brain stimulation has been shown to be an effective treatment for a variety of brain diseases, especially those involving movement like Parkinson’s disease,” says Emad Eskandar MD, director of functional neurosurgery at MGH and the project’s principal investigator.  “Our goal is to take DBS to the next level and create an implantable device to treat disorders like PTSD and TBI. Together with our partners we’re committed to developing this technology, which we hope will be a bold new step toward treating those suffering from these debilitating disorders,” says Eskandar. The initiative, called Transdiagnostic Restoration of Affective Networks by System Identification and Function Oriented Real-Modeling and Deep Brain Stimulation (TRANSFORM DBS), involves cross-hospital collaborations along with partners from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and Draper Labs.  The MGH-based team will include the departments of Neurosurgery, Psychiatry, Neurology, Anesthesia and Critical Care, and the Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging. The TRANSFORM DBS team will also work closely with scientists at Draper Laboratories, who will be responsible for the engineering portions of the project. “We’re strongly encouraged by the previous data connected with this approach,” says Eskandar. “Our hope is that this project will not only restore quality of life for those affected, both military and civilian, but dramaticallychange the way we approach the treatment of neuropsychiatric disorders." Source: ineffableisland.com

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Scientists building ‘space ark’ to save humanity

Daedalus Blueprints by Nathan Fowkes
Scientists are developing an interstellar Noah’s Ark – a self-sustaining spaceship that can carry humans on a one-way mission to find a new world to inhabit in the event of climate change or nuclear or biological warfare. Rachel Armstrong, a senior architecture and design lecturer at the University of Greenwich, is leading the project, with 13 designers, six of whom are based in the UK and rest from US, Italy and the Netherlands. Researchers in Project Persephone, investigating new bio-technologies that could one day help to create a self-sustaining spacecraft to carry people beyond our solar system. The spaceship would incorporate into its structure organic matter such as algae and artificial soil, using the Sun’s energy to produce biofuel and a sustainable source of food, ‘The Times’ reported. It would need to keep a few thousand people alive for generations on a spaceship to find a new world to inhabit, researchers said. Scientists are “considering the application of living technologies such as protocells, programmable smart chemistry, in the context of habitable starship architecture that can respond and evolve according to the needs of its inhabitants.”Armstrong’s research focuses on bio-engineering, developing artificial soil and droplets of water that can be programmed to carry key elements. to help us personalise your reading experience. The team’s sociologist, Steve Fuller, questioned: “We need nature to survive, so how do we take nature with us?”. Researchers hope the project’s principal use will be to teach us more about building sustainable cities on Earth. Source: The Indian Express
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