Keen On America

From Orphanage to Google Brain: David Sussillo on Heroin, Neural Networks and the Mysteries of the Heart

Mar 13, 2026
David Sussillo, a neuroscientist who worked at Google Brain and Meta and teaches at Stanford, recounts an extraordinary life from orphanage and parental addiction to neural reverse engineering. He discusses emergence, how chance moments shaped him, the limits of neuroscience to explain personal history, AI optimism, therapy and recovery, and practical ideas to improve child care institutions.
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ANECDOTE

From Heroin-Addicted Parents To Group Home

  • David Sussillo grew up in Albuquerque and entered a group home after his parents' heroin addiction led to divorce and instability.
  • He spent his childhood at the Albuquerque Christian Children’s Home then Milton Hershey School, shaping his early life and later memoir Emergence.
ANECDOTE

Gifted Test Created A Life Story

  • A third-grade gifted-and-talented test changed Sussillo's school experience, moving him into classes where he fit better and reduced behavioral issues.
  • That placement also gave him a self-story of talent he leaned on through adolescence and beyond.
INSIGHT

Neuroscience Has Big Gaps In Explaining Life

  • Neuroscience offers limited explanatory power for personal life; Sussillo says the field doesn't yet explain complex human stories the public expects.
  • He relied more on psychotherapy and relationships than neural models to understand his past.
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