يحاول ذهب - حر
How a tiny worm's brain could transform artificial intelligence
December 2025
|BBC Science Focus
'Liquid neural networks', inspired by tiny worms, promise smaller, smarter and more transparent AI
-
Today's artificial intelligence (AI) models are behemoths. Their function is determined by billions of parameters, they're trained on oceans of data and are hosted on vast, energy-hungry server farms. But does it have to be this way? Apparently not. One of the most promising new contenders for the future of machine intelligence grew out of something much smaller: a microscopic worm.
Inspired by Caenorhabditis elegans, a millimetre-long nematode with just 302 neurons in its nervous system, researchers have created a radically different kind of AI. Known as 'liquid neural networks', they can learn, adapt and reason all while running on a single device, instead of being distributed across many servers and the cloud.
"I wanted to understand human intelligence," Dr Ramin Hasani, co-founder and CEO of Liquid AI, a company at the forefront of this tiny revolution, told BBC Science Focus. “But when I started to look at what information we have available on the human brain, or even rat or monkey brains, I realised it’s almost nothing.”
At the time, the animal with the most comprehensively mapped nervous system was C. elegans. So that’s where Hasani and his colleagues started.
Hasani’s fascination with C. elegans wasn’t about its behaviour, but its ‘neural dynamics’ — the way its cells communicate.
Neurons in the worm’s brain communicate through graded, analogue signals rather than the electrical spikes more akin to digital signals found in larger animals. As nervous systems evolved and organisms grew bigger, spiking neurons became a more efficient way to send information.
Yet the roots of human neural computation still trace back to that analogue world.
For Hasani, this was a revelation. “Biology as a whole is a fascinating way to reduce the space of possibilities,” he said. “Billions of years of evolution have searched through all possible combinations of building efficient algorithms.”
هذه القصة من طبعة December 2025 من BBC Science Focus.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من BBC Science Focus
BBC Science Focus
HOW UNLIKELY IS OUR UNIVERSE?
Our understanding of the Universe has revealed that its existence, and indeed our own, relies on a particular set of rules.
1 mins
December 2025
BBC Science Focus
DOES YOUR NAME AFFECT YOUR PERSONALITY?
Research is revealing that nominative determinism isn't as easy to dismiss as you might think
5 mins
December 2025
BBC Science Focus
HOW DIFFICULT WOULD IT BE TO FLY THROUGH THE ASTEROID BELT?
In the 1980 film Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back, Han Solo and friends try to escape pursuing imperial forces by flying through an asteroid field. Droid C-3PO remarks, \"the odds of successfully navigating an asteroid field is approximately 3,720 to 1\". The scene depicts a chaotic, dense field of rocks swirling and spinning through space. This scenario has been played out many times in the cinema.
1 min
December 2025
BBC Science Focus
HOW CAN I BE MORE PERSUASIVE?
Most of us like to think we're rational people. If someone shows us evidence that we're wrong, we'll change our minds, right? Well, not necessarily, because it's not always that simple. Being wrong feels uncomfortable and sometimes threatening. That's why changing someone's mind is often much harder than it seems.
2 mins
December 2025
BBC Science Focus
This bizarre optical illusion could teach us how animals think
By seeing which animals fall for a classic visual trick, scientists are uncovering how different brains make sense of the world
1 mins
December 2025
BBC Science Focus
LIFE AT THE PARTY
The secret that keeps the superagers so sprightly could be socialising
3 mins
December 2025
BBC Science Focus
AIN'T NO MOUNTAIN HIGH ENOUGH
Could an exoskeleton help you scale every peak with ease? Ezzy Pearson straps on some cyborg enhancements to find out
5 mins
December 2025
BBC Science Focus
A slice across the sky
The green flash slicing through the skies in this shot is a fireball.
1 min
December 2025
BBC Science Focus
TB is surging. Should we be worried?
Cases of the world's deadliest infection are climbing in the UK and US. Why is tuberculosis returning and how do we fight back?
4 mins
December 2025
BBC Science Focus
I survived the worst fire in the history of space exploration and had to keep it a secret
Astronaut Jerry Linenger opens up about one of the worst accidents in space, and the cover-up that followed
1 mins
December 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
