There may be some food for thought here. P&G has created a work environment where ideas flow. At their fabric and homecare innovation center even the height of the cubicle dividers have been researched to allow both privacy and active conversation. Labs are open plan to allow scientists to swap ideas and see what others are doing. The four floors ...
Read More »microRNA
Have you wondered why it’s taking so long to figure out bad, complex diseases like cancer? Well one reason is that basic biological processes–gene regulation in this case–are not as simple as we figured. Ever since they finished sequencing the human genome a few years ago and we learned that we have maybe 25,000 genes instead of the 100,000 we ...
Read More »Do You Want to Live Forever?
A fellow named Aubrey David Nicholas Jasper de Grey at Cambridge University is working on it. (He looks a little like Rasputin, but that’s beside the point.) What’s interesting is that he calls his project "engineered negligible senescence." Instead of talking about "immortality"–a loaded, controversial idea–de Grey is focusing on engineering a reduction in the processes that cause senescence–i.e., aging–at ...
Read More »Private vs. the commons in biology
Ah, the classic "private property" vs. "share it" debate thrives in biology. Companies and patents hold intellectual "property" privately but there is a movement to put science information in "the commons." From Wired: To push research forward, scientists need to draw from the best data and innovations in their field. Much of the work, however, is patented, leaving many academic ...
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