‘Wetware’: Scientists use human mini-brains to power computers

A screen monitoring human brain cells activity is photographed at the Swiss start-up FinalSpark in Vevey, on October 3, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 17 October 2025
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‘Wetware’: Scientists use human mini-brains to power computers

  • Founder Swiss start-up FinalSpark believes that processors using brain cells will one day replace the chips powering the artificial intelligence boom

VEVEY, Switzerland: Inside a lab in the picturesque Swiss town of Vevey, a scientist gives tiny clumps of human brain cells the nutrient-rich fluid they need to stay alive.
It is vital these mini-brains remain healthy, because they are serving as rudimentary computer processors — and unlike your laptop, once they die, they cannot be rebooted.
This new field of research, called biocomputing or “wetware,” aims to harness the evolutionarily honed yet still mysterious computing power of the human brain.
During a tour of Swiss start-up FinalSpark’s lab, co-founder Fred Jordan told AFP he believes that processors using brain cells will one day replace the chips powering the artificial intelligence boom.
The supercomputers behind AI tools like ChatGPT currently use silicon semiconductors to simulate the neurons and networks of the human brain.
“Instead of trying to mimic, let’s use the real thing,” Jordan said.
Among other potential advantages, biocomputing could help address the skyrocketing energy demands of AI, which have already threatened climate emissions targets and led some tech giants to resort to nuclear power.
“Biological neurons are one million times more energy efficient than artificial neurons,” Jordan said. They can also be endlessly reproduced in the lab, unlike the massively in-demand AI chips made by companies like behemoth Nvidia.
But for now, wetware’s computing power is a very long way from competing with the hardware that runs the world.
And another question lingers: could these tiny brains become conscious?

Brain power

To make its “bioprocessors,” FinalSpark first purchases stem cells. These cells, which were originally human skin cells from anonymous human donors, can become any cell in the body.
FinalSpark’s scientists then turn them into neurons, which are collected into millimeter-wide clumps called brain organoids.
They are around the size of the brain of a fruit fly larvae, Jordan said.
Electrodes are attached to the organoids in the lab, which allow the scientists to “spy on their internal discussion,” he explained.
The scientists can also stimulate the organoids with a small electric current. Whether they respond with a spike in activity — or not — is roughly the equivalent of the ones or zeroes in traditional computing.
Ten universities around the world are conducting experiments using FinalSpark’s organoids — the small company’s website even has a live feed of the neurons at work.
Benjamin Ward-Cherrier, a researcher at the University of Bristol, used one of the organoids as the brain of a simple robot that managed to distinguish between different braille letters.
There are many challenges, including encoding the data in a way the organoid might understand — then trying to interpret what the brain cells “spit out,” he told AFP.
“Working with robots is very easy by comparison,” Ward-Cherrier said with a laugh.
“There’s also the fact that they are living cells — and that means that they do die,” he added.
Indeed, Ward-Cherrier was halfway through an experiment when the organoid died and his team had to start over. FinalSpark says the organoids live for up to six months.
At Johns Hopkins University in the United States, researcher Lena Smirnova is using similar organoids to study brain conditions such as autism and Alzheimer’s disease in the hopes of finding new treatments.
Biocomputing is currently more “pie in the sky,” unlike the “low-hanging fruit” use of the technology for biomedical research — but that could change dramatically over the next 20 years, she told AFP.

Do organoids dream of electric sheep? 

All the scientists AFP spoke to dismissed the idea that these tiny balls of cells in petri dishes were at risk of developing anything resembling consciousness.
Jordan acknowledged that “this is at the edge of philosophy,” which is why FinalSpark collaborates with ethicists.
He also pointed out that the organoids — which lack pain receptors — have around 10,000 neurons, compared to a human brain’s 100 billion.
However much about our brains, including how they create consciousness, remains a mystery.
That is why Ward-Cherrier hopes that — beyond computer processing — biocomputing will ultimately reveal more about how our brains work.
Back in the lab, Jordan opens the door of what looks like a big fridge containing 16 brain organoids in a tangle of tubes.
Lines suddenly start spiking on the screen next to the incubator, indicating significant neural activity.
The brain cells have no known way of sensing that their door has been opened, and the scientists have spent years trying to figure why this happens.
“We still don’t understand how they detect the opening of the door,” Jordan admitted.

 


Venezuela says exiles welcome to return following mass amnesty

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Venezuela says exiles welcome to return following mass amnesty

QUATIRE: Interim president Delcy Rodriguez promised Monday that Venezuelans in exile would be welcomed back with open arms following a new amnesty law passed after the US ouster of Nicolas Maduro, as authorities continued to slowly release prisoners.
“I am telling you: the doors of Venezuela, the arms of the Venezuelan people, are open to those who want to return in this process of healing from hatred,” she said in a televised address.
An estimated seven million Venezuelans have fled their homeland due to the political and economic crisis and many opposition figures live in exile.
A total of 34 prisoners were released Monday from the Rodeo I penitentiary east of Caracas to scenes of joy from waiting relatives.
Among those freed were military cadets accused of plotting a coup, as well as civilians linked to alleged assassination conspiracies — categories of prisoners some fear the amnesty law wouldn’t cover.
Grecia Arana ran and leapt into the arms of her husband Reinardo Morillo as he crossed the threshold into freedom.
“This is how I dreamed it,” she told AFP, laughing.
Scenes of celebration at the prison gates included several prisoners with shaved heads who shouted “We are free!” as they exited, ending an anguished wait by their families.
“We are completely free, without any restrictions,” Luis Viera, one of the released prisoners, told AFP. He had been locked up for 13 months.
At the same time, the country’s authorities are pressing for the release of Maduro, who is jailed in the United States.
Addressing the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, Venezuela’s Foreign Minister Yvan Gil Pinto demanded the toppled president’s immediate release.
Maduro, who was captured in a January 3 raid by the United States, is in custody in New York along with his wife, awaiting trial on drug trafficking charges.
The 63-year-old has pleaded not guilty and declared that he is a “prisoner of war.”
“January 3, 2026, marked a turning point of extreme gravity,” Gil told the top UN rights body, adding that the “illegal military action” by US forces left over 100 people killed.

- ‘Reconciliation’ aim -

Gil stressed that his country was “working toward a process of acknowledging past wounds, forgiveness and reconciliation,” referring to the amnesty law.
The country’s legislature unanimously adopted the landmark law last Thursday, and interim leader Rodriguez hailed its passage, describing it as a step toward “a more democratic, fairer, freer Venezuela.”
Rodriguez’s brother, parliament chief Jorge Rodriguez, said 1,500 people had applied for the amnesty, which covers a range of charges used to lock up dissidents during 27 years of hard-line socialist rule.
Some 600 political prisoners remain behind bars throughout the country, according to Foro Penal — an NGO dedicated to the defense of political prisoners.
Approximately 500 people have been released since January.

- Thaw with West -

Opposition figures have criticized the new legislation, which appears to exclude some offenses previously used to target Maduro’s political opponents. Nor does it include military offenses, such as attempted coups.
Since Maduro’s ouster, Rodriguez has worked closely with the United States, and the amnesty law has helped accelerate a thaw in Venezuela’s ties with the broader West.
The European Union’s top diplomat Kaja Kallas said Monday she would propose lifting EU sanctions on Rodriguez, who previously served as Maduro’s vice president.
Elsewhere, the UN rights office said it was in talks with Caracas to reopen its mission in Venezuela. Its staff were expelled in February 2024.
In a further sign of a break with the past, Rodriguez dismissed from her cabinet the wife of Alex Saab, a businessman accused of serving as Maduro’s frontman in corruption schemes.
Saab was indicted in the United States for money laundering but returned to Venezuela in 2024 as part of a prisoner swap to take up the role of industry minister.
Rodriguez removed him from his position in January.
On Monday, she sacked his wife, Camilla Fabri, who served as deputy minister for international communication.