The Pentagon's advanced research wing has announced its latest budget - and whoa, does DARPA ever have some ambitious plans for the future.
Their new Biotech unit will be harnessing biology for national security, and dealing with everything from stopping plagues to building synthetic soldiers. DARPA's commitment to cutting-edge innovation is unquestioned.

The very essence of the defense agency is to make sure that U.S. military technology is more sophisticated than that of the nation's rivals.
Among its many current initiatives, DARPA is working on,
self-teaching computers (if anyone's going to build a recursively improving AI it's going to be DARPA)
In addition to these projects, DARPA has been busy at work on various biotechnology-related endeavors, but these attempts to date have lacked cohesion and focus.
Looking to change this, DARPA has announced the creation of its Biological Technologies Office (BTO) - an effort to,
"explore the the increasingly dynamic intersection of biology and the physical sciences."
The new division will expand upon its Defense Sciences (DSO) and Microsystems Technology (MTO) Offices.
Speaking to the U.S. House of Representatives last week, DARPA Director Arati Prabhakar said that,
"Biology is nature's ultimate innovator, and any agency that hangs its hat on innovation would be foolish not to look to this master of networked complexity for inspiration and solutions."
Indeed, the new division will look into three incredibly promising research areas.

The Transhuman Soldier
A priority for DARPA is in restoring and maintaining the abilities of its war-fighters. It wants to maintain peak soldier abilities and then restore those abilities as soon as possible after an injury.
This will include the development of advanced prosthetics (featuring mind-controlled limbs), neural interfaces, the ability to survive blood loss, and even neurotechnological solutions to treat psychological trauma such as PTSD.
DARPA has already made tremendous strides in this area.
Speaking to NPR's Marketplace, Prabhakar noted:
We had quadriplegic volunteers who agreed to have brain surgery, essentially have a small array placed on the surface of their brains, to pick up these neural signals for motor control, and then to use those to control these new, very sophisticated, robotic, prosthetic arms.In a sense we've opened a door - a connection between the human brain and the rest of the world. You can let your imagination go wild about where that's going to take us.
No doubt - many of these therapeutic technologies will be leveraged to enhance the capacities of soldiers.
For example, work on memory impairments is leading to new insights into the brain's functioning. This will inform the development of technologies that will help soldiers interact with complex systems; future interfaces and tools will deliver information to soldiers in a way that's easier for them to understand (which is a growing problem - our systems are starting to operate faster than human comprehension).
As Prabhakar says, there's,
"going to be a future where we start learning radically new ways to interact between the complexity of the human brain and the complexity of the world around us."

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