Demis Hassabis, a computer scientist, has struck the deal with Google for his secretive start-up business Deep Mind Technologies, which specialises in artificial intelligence (AI) for computers.
Hassabis, 37, has built the company by bringing together neuroscientists and computer engineers in an effort to use technology and medical research to help machines to mimic the brain's ability to improve performance.
He previously led a study at University College London in 2009 that scanned human brains and found "just by looking at neural activity we were able to say what someone was thinking".
Google founder Larry Page, who has expressed interest in making search commands easier by having an implant in the brain, is understood to have led the move to buy Deep Mind.
Beat Facebook to it
The website The Information claimed that Google had beaten Facebook to the acquisition and had sealed the deal after agreeing to set up an ethics board to ensure that the AI technology was not abused.
Hassabis is known within the computer gaming industry for having "a brain larger than a planet". He began playing chess when he was four years old, reached Master Standard by the age of 13 and represented England.
He did his first work in the games industry only two years later when he entered a competition to design a clone for Space Invaders. Going into the industry seemed like "the perfect marriage between games and programing", he has said.
By the age of 16, Hassabis began working at games company Bullfrog and co-wrote the successful game Theme Park — which was based on an amusement park and released in 1994 — in his year off before going to the University of Cambridge. His student friends struggled to believe that he was the author of such a successful product until they saw his name on the packaging.
After graduating in computer science from Queen's College, Hassabis quickly returned to the games industry. He set up his own business, Elixir Studios, where he was executive designer of a game called Republic: The Revolution, which attempted to recreate a "living, breathing city" and was nominated for a BAFTA.
The Great Gamer
For many years, Hassabis was a successful competitor in the London-based Mind Sports Olympiad, taking part in its elite Pentamind contest — a sort of mental pentathlon. Hassabis was Pentamind champion in five of the first seven years after the Olympiad was founded in 1997. His success meant that he was described as "probably the best games player in history".
His next computer game Evil Genius, which was based on a Bond-style villain in an island lair, was more favourably received by critics. After selling the rights to publishers, Hassabis went into medical science to pursue his interest in AI technology. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts for his game designs.
As a cognitive neuroscientist he specialised in autobiographical memory (combining personal recollection and general knowledge) and amnesia. He investigated whether patients with lesions to the Hippocampus parts of their brains suffered damage to their imagination process as well as their memory recall. He completed his doctorate in cognitive neuroscience in 2009 at University College London and was visiting scientist at MIT and Harvard.
In 2012, he left academia to set up Deep Mind Technologies, developing technology for e-commerce and gaming. The company has a reputation for secrecy. Its aim is said to be to develop computers that think like humans. It is said to employ 50 people, including cofounders Shane Legg, a 40-year-old New Zealander, and Mustafa Seleyman, a 29-year-old Briton.
Deep Mind's investors include US Tesla car mogul Elon Musk, early Facebook investor Peter Thiel and the family of Summly creator Nick d'Aloisio, who are all set for windfalls following the sale to Google.
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