Breakout Labs announces first grants to support radical scientific innovation
April 20, 2012
Six visionary teams are the first to receive funding from Breakout Labs, a Thiel Foundation program to support radical scientific innovation.
The projects involve digital brain reconstruction, reversible cryopreservation, human cell re-engineering, universal airborne contaminant detection, artificial protein therapeutics, and antimatter-based fuel.
Breakout Labs is a revolutionary revolving fund to promote innovation in science and technology. It provides teams of researchers in very early-stage companies with the means to pursue their most radical goals in science and technology. Breakout Labs awarded six grants, of up to $350,000 each, to the following recipients:
3Scan , to develop 3-D digital reconstruction of brain tissue, using a novel, faster, less expensive microscope technology. Building a map of connections in the brain-the connectome-is a critical step to understanding what makes the human brain unique.
Arigos Biomedical, to develop methods of cooling organs for long-term storage. When combined with emerging advances in cryopreservation, tissue engineering, and stem cell therapies to eliminate graft rejection, this technology would make banked organs immediately available to anyone needing a transplant.
Immusoft , to re-program human immune cells to produce therapeutics in the body. This technology could dramatically improve the ability to treat a range of diseases, as well as enhance human health and longevity.
Inspirotec , to develop a universal system for collecting and identifying virtually any airborne agent. Our environment is increasingly subject to natural and man-made toxins, and this technology would allow for their capture and identification in a simple, low cost handheld device.
Longevity Biotech, to develop an entirely new class of therapeutics via artificial protein technology (“Hybridtides”). Hybridtides are targeted biologic-like molecules which are highly-resistant to breakdown by natural digestive enzymes and tunable to very stable molecular structures. These features have demonstrated potent therapeutic activity with the possibility of oral biologic delivery.
Positron Dynamics, to enhance the production and collection of positrons, a class of elementary particles. Positrons have many near-term applications, for example, in medical imaging; in the long run, they may be a source of energy-antimatter propulsion-for space travel.
“In the past, people dreamed of the future as a radically better, more technologically advanced place: you might live for centuries, delegate work to your robots, and take your vacations on the moon,” said Peter Thiel, who established and funds the Thiel Foundation. “Now, many people expect their children to inherit a world worse than today’s. With Breakout Labs, we want to rekindle dreams of an amazing future. That’s why we’re supporting researchers who dream big and want to build a tomorrow in which we all want to live.”
Breakout Labs accepts applications on a rolling basis. Although the program is open to proposals in any field of advanced science and technology, the current emphasis is on the intersection of biology and technology. Going forward, individual grants will be awarded as proposals emerge from the Breakout Labs’ review process.
Comments (4)
by tedhowardnz
Hi LP
I agree that we still have plenty to learn about the brain, and we are learning plenty at present.
I suspect that we will not crack the AI “nut” until we stop trying to do everything using 1 to 1 storage systems (linear storage) and start using holographic processing (many to one storage and retrieval system).
I’m actually quite happy about that – gives us a bit of breathing room.
Before we give birth to AI we need to get our own house in order.
We need to go beyond money as a valuation system.
We need to recognise the fact that markets value abundance of anything at zero, yet humans value abundance of essentials very highly.
It seems that our attachment to monetary value is the greatest threat to humanity at this time.
It is removing much needed redundancy from our systems, and replacing it with Just In Time.
It is removing abundance from all levels, and replacing it with a market determined optimum level of scarcity.
We have the ability to create systems that can deliver abundance to all, but there is no monetary incentive to do so.
So I’m not too worried about the hardware of brain, fascinating as it is.
It seems that it is the operating system that is in need of a massive upgrade.
Fortunately, the context sensitive holographic system that it is makes that relatively simple, given the appropriate context.
by tedhowardnz
Why do they think their is anything in the human brain that is unique?
Sure it is big,
What if their isn’t anything particularly unique about the brain, just about the organisation of our bodies and social structures, requiring cooperation throughout life, and the evolution of complex symbolic language.
What if it is our operating system, our symbolic language, that is the truly unique thing; which combined with our hands has allowed for really complex technologies to develop?
The technologies we have now give us amazing power to transmit information across time and space. The evolution of our concepts and technologies is clearly exponential, with some individual minds far further out into possibility space than others.
by Lord Penguin
Ted, there’s plenty we’ve not been able to replicate about the brain, and we most likely won’t be able to until we have a better understanding of it. It operates with many signals at once, with a single CPU, each neuron (and its connections) has the capacity to “learn” and change based on the signals it receives, the brain can recover from lots of different injuries… and we still don’t know how dreams work.
Whether or not understanding the brain would help us build better AI, it would be necessary in creating ways of connecting with that AI.
by gaoptimize
Peter Thiel is the transparent Angel Investor and deserves great credit for his positive vision and efforts. My children and I are thankful!