In 2024, Eon senior scientist Philip Shiu and collaborators published in Nature a computational model of the entire adult Drosophila melanogaster brain, containing more than 125,000 neurons and 50 million synaptic connections, built from the FlyWire connectome and machine learning predictions of neurotransmitter identity. That model predicted motor behavior at 95% accuracy. But it was disembodied: a brain without a body, activation without physics, motor outputs with nowhere to go.
Now the brain has somewhere to go. Building on previous work, including Shiu et al.’s whole-brain computational model, the NeuroMechFly v2 embodied simulation framework, and Özdil et al.’s research on centralized brain networks underlying body part coordination, this demonstration integrates Eon’s connectome-based brain emulation with a physics-simulated fly body in MuJoCo. The result: multiple distinct behaviors driven by the emulated brain’s own circuit dynamics. Sensory input flows in, neural activity propagates through the complete connectome, motor commands flow out, and a physically simulated body executes the output, closing the loop from perception to action for the first time in a whole-brain emulation.



Really? Well, I haven’t read the paper yet, but according to this Scientific American article dated October 25, 2011, IBM’s research group in Almaden, California had managed to “completely simulate” the brain of a mouse, rat and cat using their “C2” cortical simulator running on Blue Gene.
Not that I’m saying you’re wrong. Perhaps they have a much more liberal interpretation of “completely” then the present research for all I know.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Brain_Project According to this they only claimed mouse cortex in 2019. Which is a lot of brain but isn’t total.
I’m only seeing actual data from a more recent one by the Allen Institute and a Japanese supercomputer doing mouse cortex in 2025. https://alleninstitute.org/news/one-of-worlds-most-detailed-virtual-brain-simulations-is-changing-how-we-study-the-brain/
I’m not seeing any data from a full mouse brain simulation anywhere. Scientific American is more pop than sci unfortunately.