Home > Henry Markram > Biography full

Henry Markram

South African-born Israeli neuroscientistNot to be confused with Henry Markham.

Henry John Markram (born 28 March 1962) is a South African-born Israeli neuroscientist, professor at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland and director of the Blue Brain Project and founder of the Human Brain Project.

Contents

  • 1 Education
  • 2 Personal life
  • 3 Research
  • 4 Selected Publications
  • 5 References
  • 6 External links

Education

Henry Markram obtained his Bachelor of Science degree in physiology and the history and philosophy of science from the University of Cape Town, South Africa and his PhD in neurobiology from the Weizmann Ins*ute of Science, Israel in 1991, under the supervision of Menahem Segal. During his PhD work, he discovered a link between acetylcholine and memory mechanisms by showing that acetylcholine modulates the primary receptor linked to synaptic plasticity.

Personal life

Born in South Africa, Markram is now an Israeli citizen. Markram met his current wife, fellow neuroscientist Kamila Markram, at the Max Planck Ins*ute for Brain Research in Frankfurt. They moved to the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne together and, in 2007, founded Frontiers Media. Markram has been married twice and has a total of five children, one of whom, Kai, has autism.

Markram's biography "The Boy Who Felt Too Much," written by Lorenz Wagner, reveals a story about his relationship with his son, Kai.

Research

Following his PhD, Markram went to the United States as a Fulbright Scholar at the National Ins*utes of Health (NIH), where he studied ion channels on synaptic terminals with Elise F. Stanley. As a Minerva Fellow he then went to the Laboratory of Bert Sakmann at the Max Planck Ins*ute, Heidelberg, Germany, where he along with his colleagues discovered calcium transients in dendrites evoked by sub-threshold activity, and by single action potentials propagating back into dendrites. He also began studying the connectivity between neurons, describing in great detail how layer 5 pyramidal neurons are interconnected.

Some of his work altered the relative timing of single pre- and post-synaptic action potentials to reveal a learning mechanism operating between neurons where the relative timing in the millisecond range affects the coupling strength between neurons. The importance of such timing has been reproduced in many brain regions and is known as spike timing-dependent synaptic plasticity (STDP).

Markram was appointed *istant professor at the Weizmann Ins*ute of Science, where his group started systematically dissecting out the neocortical column. He along with his postdocs and PhD students discovered that synaptic learning can also involve a change in synaptic dynamics (called redistribution of synaptic efficacy) rather than merely changing the strengths of connections. He and his group also studied principles governing neocortical microcircuit structure, function, and emergent dynamics. Together with Wolfgang Ma* he and his team developed the so-called theory of liquid state machine, or high entropy computing.

In 2002, he moved to EPFL as full professor and founder/director of the Brain Mind Ins*ute and Director of the Center for Neuroscience and Technology. At the BMI, in the Laboratory for Neural Microcircuitry, Markram continues to study the organisation of the neocortical column, develops tools to carry out multi-neuron patch clamp recordings combined with laser and electrical stimulation as well as multi-site electrical recording, chemical imaging and gene expression.

In 2013, the European Union funded the Human Brain Project, led by Markram, to the tune of $1.3 billion. Markram claimed that the project would create a simulation of the entire human brain on a supercomputer within a decade, revolutionising the treatment of Alzheimer's disease and other brain disorders. Less than two years into it, the project was recognised to be mismanaged and its claims overblown, and Markram was asked to step down.

On 8 October 2015, the Blue Brain Project published the first digital reconstruction and simulation of the micro-circuitry of a neonatal rat somatosensory cortex.

Selected Publications

  • Markram, H.; Lübke, J.; Frotscher, M.; Sakmann, B. (1997). "Regulation of Synaptic Efficacy by Coincidence of Postsynaptic APs and EPSPs". Science. 275 (5297): 213–215. doi:10.1126/science.275.5297.213. PMID:8985014. S2CID:46640132.
  • Ma*, Wolfgang; Natschläger, Thomas; Markram, Henry (2002). "Real-Time Computing Without Stable States: A New Framework for Neural Computation Based on Perturbations". Neural Computation. 14 (11): 2531–2560. doi:10.1162/089976602760407955. PMID:12433288. S2CID:1045112.
  • Markram, Henry; Toledo-Rodriguez, Maria; Wang, Yun; Gupta, Anirudh; Silberberg, Gilad; Wu, Caizhi (2004). "Interneurons of the neocortical inhibitory system". Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 5 (10): 793–807. doi:10.1038/nrn1519. PMID:15378039. S2CID:382334.
  • Tsodyks, M. V.; Markram, H. (1997). "The neural code between neocortical pyramidal neurons depends on neurotransmitter release probability". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 94 (2): 719–723. Bibcode:1997PNAS...94..719T. doi:10.1073/pnas.94.2.719. PMC:19580. PMID:9012851.
  • Gupta, A.; Wang, Y.; Markram, H. (2000). "Organizing Principles for a Diversity of GABAergic Interneurons and Synapses in the Neocortex". Science. 287 (5451): 273–278. Bibcode:2000Sci...287..273G. doi:10.1126/science.287.5451.273. PMID:10634775.
  • Perin, R.; Berger, T. K.; Markram, H. (2011). "A synaptic organizing principle for cortical neuronal groups". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 108 (13): 5419–5424. Bibcode:2011PNAS..108.5419P. doi:10.1073/pnas.1016051108. PMC:3069183. PMID:21383177.
  • Markram, Henry; Muller, Eilif; Ramaswamy, Srikanth; Reimann, Michael W.; Abdellah, Marwan; Sanchez, Carlos Aguado; Ailamaki, Anastasia; Alonso-Nanclares, Lidia; Antille, Nicolas; Arsever, Selim; Kahou, Guy Antoine Atenekeng; Berger, Thomas K.; Bilgili, Ahmet; Buncic, Nenad; Chalimourda, Athan*ia; Chindemi, Giuseppe; Courcol, Jean-Denis; Delalondre, Fabien; Delattre, Vincent; Druckmann, Shaul; Dumusc, Raphael; Dynes, James; Eilemann, Stefan; Gal, Eyal; Gevaert, Michael Emiel; Ghobril, Jean-Pierre; Gidon, Albert; Graham, Joe W.; Gupta, Anirudh; et:al. (2015). "Reconstruction and Simulation of Neocortical Microcircuitry". Cell. 163 (2): 456–492. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2015.09.029. PMID:26451489. S2CID:14466831.

References

    External links

    • Henry Markram at TED
    Portals:SwitzerlandBiography