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Lee recently spoke to Harvard Medicine News about the promise of connectomics. “The brain is structured so that each neuron is connected to thousands of other neurons, and so to understand what a single neuron is doing, ideally you study it within the context of the rest of the neural network,” Lee explained. Wei-Chung Allen Lee, Harvard Medical School associate professor of neurology at Boston Children’s Hospital, is working in a new field of neuroscience called connectomics, which aims to comprehensively map connections between neurons in the brain. In the human brain, some 86 billion neurons form 100 trillion connections to each other - numbers that, ironically, are far too large for the human brain to fathom. This image is misleading: Neurons don’t exist in isolation. Many of us have seen microscopic images of neurons in the brain - each neuron appearing as a glowing cell in a vast sea of blackness. Harvard COVID-19 Information: Keep Harvard Healthy.Research Departments, Centers, Initiatives and more.
