This is surely a 'must see' video.
Drew Berry, biomedical animator for The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research (WEHI), is a key member of an international team that recently won an Emmy Award in the category of Outstanding Science, Technology and Nature Programming for the episode, The Human Race.
Berrys biomedical animations have been applauded globally and exhibited in prestigious venues, including the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York and the Pompidou Centre in Paris. In 2004, Drew's animations were also honored with a BAFTA Award.
You can find out more about folding protines at Folding@home then actually become part of it at folding.stanford.edu/English/Main.
tes1900 5 days ago
argh, can't we get a high-def version of this?? The compression is terrible, and I want to see every glorious pixel of this!
virgildisgrace 3 weeks ago
cool dance party near the end.
mdoerkse 1 month ago
Soundwaves from the underground
btamills 1 month ago
This is so cool
btamills 1 month ago
At 7:00, it appears that a red blood cells is assembling, then joining others (at 7:05) and then carrying oxygen (at 7:08) throughout the body. But what happens after that at 7:22? What's that green thing attaching to the blood cells, and what are they doing next?
Yaalah 1 month ago
Amazing!
Bystroushaak 1 year ago
wow!
traxonja 1 year ago
Incredible - found this after a story on cellular animation in today's NYT. Thanks for the post!
maxinbo 1 year ago
fantastic...this way it´s easy to learn...thank´s for sharing
galaxia437 2 years ago