Subsections of <YOUR NAME HERE> — HTGAA Spring 2026
Homework
Weekly homework submissions:
Week 1 HW: Principles and Practices
Engineering Optogenetic Neural Dust: Bridging the gap between circuit neuroscience and non-invasive monitoring.
Subsections of Homework
Week 1 HW: Principles and Practices
1. Application: Optogenetic “Neural Dust” for Circuit Mapping
The Tool
I am proposing the development of Bio-Hybrid Neural Dust—micron-sized, genetically encoded sensors that act as wireless biological nodes. Instead of using invasive physical electrodes or fiber-optic implants, these sensors are delivered via viral vectors to specific brain regions (like the hippocampus or prefrontal cortex). They are engineered to convert ultrasonic energy from a wearable device into light for neural stimulation (optogenetics) and detect neural firing, backscattering that data as ultrasonic pulses.
The Why
Our current neuro-monitoring tools are frustratingly binary: we have high-resolution invasive probes that cause tissue scarring, or non-invasive fMRI which lacks the speed to capture actual neural firing. This tool would allow us to monitor memory circuits in real-time in freely moving subjects over long periods. For my interest in neurodegeneration, this is the “holy grail”—it allows us to see how circuit communication breaks down in Alzheimer’s before the neurons actually die.
2. Governance and Policy Goals
The primary goal is Cognitive Security and Integrity. If we develop the ability to “write” to the brain wirelessly, we must ensure the “pen” is protected.
- Sub-goal A: Frequency Encryption. Preventing unauthorized or malicious activation of the “dust” by ambient ultrasonic noise or bad actors.
- Sub-goal B: Biocompatible Containment. Ensuring the viral vectors used to deliver these sensors are replication-deficient and cannot spread to non-target organs.
3. Governance Actions
Action 1: Spectral “Handshaking” (Technical Strategy)
- Purpose: Currently, ultrasonic modulation is “analog.” I propose a digital-to-acoustic handshake where the neural dust only activates when it detects a specific, encrypted pulse-code.
- Design: Requires bio-engineers to design a piezo-electric “tuner” on the particle that resonates only at a unique, coded frequency.
- Assumptions: We assume the encryption doesn’t add too much physical bulk to the micron-sized particle.
- Risks: If the signal latency is too high, real-time circuit mapping becomes impossible.
Action 2: Registry of Vector Custody (Rule/Requirement)
- Purpose: Treat the specific neuro-targeting viral vectors as “Schedule 1” biological materials.
- Design: Federal regulators (like the FDA or CDSCO) would require a digital ledger to track the Chain of Custody from the synthesis lab to the clinic.
- Assumptions: Assumes that labs won’t home-brew versions of the vectors once the genetic sequences are published.
- Risks: Could lead to a Bio-Napster situation where sequences are leaked and used in DIY bio-hacking.
Action 3: Hardware Power-Limits (Incentive/Rule)
- Purpose: Establishing mandatory safety “thresholds” for the wearable ultrasonic devices.
- Design: Manufacturers must implement a hardware-level kill switch that prevents the device from emitting power levels that could cause thermal tissue damage.
- Assumptions: Assumes we have sufficient longitudinal data on what a safe ultrasonic limit actually is.
- Risks: A hardware failure could lead to localized “hotspots” in brain tissue.
4. Scoring Rubric
| Does the option: | Option 1 | Option 2 | Option 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enhance Biosecurity | |||
| • By preventing incidents | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| • By helping respond | 3 | 2 | 3 |
| Foster Lab Safety | |||
| • By preventing incident | 2 | 1 | n/a |
| • By helping respond | 2 | 2 | n/a |
| Protect the environment | |||
| • By preventing incidents | 3 | 1 | n/a |
| • By helping respond | 3 | 2 | n/a |
| Other considerations | |||
| • Minimizing costs and burdens to stakeholders | 3 | 2 | 2 |
| • Feasibility? | 2 | 2 | 1 |
| • Not impede research | 3 | 2 | 1 |
| • Promote constructive applications | 1 | 2 | 1 |
5. Prioritization and Recommendation
Recommendation to: The International Brain Initiative and Federal Research Agencies.
I prioritize a combination of Action 1 (Technical Encryption) and Action 3 (Hardware Limits). In a field moving this fast, “Safety by Design” is more effective than “Safety by Legislation.” Rules (Action 2) are often reactive and easily circumvented by international bad actors. By building the safety into the physics of the dust and the constraints of the hardware, we ensure the technology remains therapeutic rather than invasive.
Trade-offs: This approach increases the cost of R&D and hardware production. However, given that we are interfacing with human consciousness, the “move fast and break things” ethos is ethically unacceptable.
6. Ethical Reflections
The most significant concern that arose for me this week was the concept of “Dual-Use Research of Concern” (DURC). I have always viewed my work through a therapeutic lens (curing Alzheimer’s), but the same tool that restores a memory circuit could, in theory, be used to suppress or alter one in a healthy individual.
Proposed Governance Action: I propose a mandatory “Neuro-Ethics Review” for any research involving writing to neural signals. This would be an independent board (similar to an IRB but with a focus on cognitive liberty) that must approve the signal-protocol before any publication or patent is granted. This ensures that the ability to modulate the brain is never used for non-consensual modification.