Kenneth Jeffrey "Ken" Hayworth[1] is an American neuroscientist. He is the president and co-founder of the Brain Preservation Foundation (BPF).[2]

Файл:Kenneth Hayworth.jpg
Kenneth Hayworth

Hayworth received his PhD degree in neuroscience from the University of Southern California.[2] His doctoral thesis is named "Explicit Encoding of Spatial Relations in the Human Visual System: Evidence from Functional Neuroimaging" (2009).[3] After graduating, he was a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard University in the laboratory of Jeff Lichtman.[3]

Currently, he is a Senior Scientist at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Janelia Farm Research Campus (JFRC) in Ashburn, Virginia.[2] According to the BPF website, JFRC is perhaps the leading research institution in the field of connectomics in the United States.[2] At JFRC, Hayworth is currently researching ways to extend Focused Ion Beam Scanning Electron Microscopy (FIBSEM) imaging of brain tissue to encompass much larger volumes than are currently possible.[2] He is a co-inventor of the Tape-to-SEM process for high-throughput volume imaging of neural circuits at the nanometer scale, and he designed and built several automated machines to implement this process.[2]

He is a member of the UK Cryonics and Cryopreservation Research Network.[4] He is a signatory of the Scientists' Open Letter on Cryonics, having signed it on October 22, 2010.[5]

Hayworth is a vocal advocate for mind uploading.[2] In 2015, he said he wishes that all cryonics organizations would stop offering cryopreservation services until, at a minimum, they demonstrate in an animal model that their methods and procedures are effective at preserving ultrastructure across the entire brain.[6]

SourcesПравить

External linksПравить