EBRAINS Included in ESFRI Roadmap 2021

Thanks to Human Brain Project, EBRAINS now included in the EU’s influential infrastructure roadmap

Jülich, 1 July 2021 – EBRAINS, the new digital research infrastructure of the EU’s Human Brain Project (HBP) flagship, has been included in the Roadmap 2021 of the European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures (ESFRI). ESFRI identifies research infrastructure measures for Europe that are important in terms of strategy and research policy. The ESFRI roadmap is updated every two years. This is an important milestone for EBRAINS and a recognition of the great scientific potential of the research infrastructure.

“We are very pleased to receive this recognition from the ESFRI and proud to have provided the European research landscape with a truly novel platform,” says Prof. Katrin Amunts, scientific head of the Human Brain Project and director at Jülich’s Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine.

EBRAINS aims to support brain research and the translation of scientific findings into neuro-inspired technologies, computing, medicine, and industry through digital methods and techniques, thereby contributing to scientific progress. To this end, the scientists work closely with developers of state-of-the-art information technologies and use powerful computers and AI processes to pool the constantly growing knowledge on the brain from various research fields. The HBP is establishing EBRAINS as a hub for this cooperation in Europe.

“EBRAINS was created to establish a new paradigm of neuroscience that is very closely linked to technology and the possibilities of supercomputing, data science, and machine learning. This is a core objective of the Human Brain Project. We want EBRAINS to benefit the entire scientific community,” says Amunts.

Prof. Katrin Amunts
Prof. Katrin Amunts, Direktorin am Institut für Neurowissenschaften und Medizin (INM-1) des Forschungszentrums Jülich und des C. und O. Vogt-Instituts für Hirnforschung des Universitätsklinikums Düsseldorf. Katrin Amunts ist zudem wissenschaftliche Leiterin des Human Brain Project (HBP).
Mareen Fischinger

Being the first research Infrastructure of its kind worldwide, EBRAINS offers access via a web portal to the most comprehensive database on the human brain to date as well as to powerful digital tools, for example for simulation or big data analyses, which are significantly supported by the Jülich Supercomputing Centre. The extremely high-resolution 3D atlas of the human brain developed by the Jülich Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine is also one of the central components of EBRAINS.

More than 500 scientists at over 130 European partner institutions from 19 countries are involved in developing EBRAINS. Significant contributions are provided from all over Germany. In addition to Jülich, researchers from Heidelberg University and TU Dresden are contributing “neuromorphic” computer systems, TU Munich is coordinating a platform for neurorobotics, and researchers from Charité Berlin are developing clinical “digital twin” technologies on the simulation platform “The Virtual Brain”. The results achieved and the underlying technologies are available to the entire scientific community.

Science institutions that are included in the ESFRI roadmap undergo a thorough selection procedure that takes into account both scientific excellence and stringency of implementation. The aim is to provide Europe with state-of-the-art research infrastructures in a targeted manner, to promote scientific cooperation across national borders, and to enable international cutting-edge research.

Pawel Swieboda, CEO of EBRAINS and director general of the Human Brain Project, considers the inclusion of EBRAINS in the ESFRI Roadmap 2021 a great success and a real recognition of EBRAINS’ contribution to the European research landscape. Swieboda says that this is the result of many years of research and development work at the highest level.

Further Information:

Website EBRAINS

Website ESFRI

Website Human Brain Project

Contact:

Prof. Dr. med. Katrin Amunts
Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine – Structural and Functional Organization of the Brain (INM-1)
Cécile and Oskar Vogt Institute of Brain Research
Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf/Düsseldorf University Hospital
and Chair of the Science and Infrastructure Board (SIB) of the Human Brain Project (HBP)
Tel.: +49 2461 61-4300
E-Mail: k.amunts@fz-juelich.de

Press Contact:

Peter Zekert
Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-1)
Tel.: +49 2461 61-9486
E-Mail: p.zekert@fz-juelich.de

Annette Stettien
Corporate Communications
Tel.: +49 2461 61-2388
E-Mail: a.stettien@fz-juelich.de

Last Modified: 22.05.2022