PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Stanford team makes biotechnology interactive with games and remote-control labs

Through special environments called biotic processing units, bioengineers let us interact with cells like fish in an aquarium or even do simple experiments using biolabs in the cloud

2015-04-21
(Press-News.org) In the 1950s computers were giant machines that filled buildings and served a variety of arcane functions. Today they fit into our pockets or backpacks, and help us work, communicate and play.

"Biotechnology today it is very similar to where computing technology used to be," said Ingmar Riedel-Kruse, an assistant professor of bioengineering at Stanford.

"Biological labs are housed in big buildings and the technology is hard to access," he added. "But we are changing that. We are enabling people to interact with biological materials and perform experiments the way they interact with computers today. We call this interactive biotechnology." (see video).

Riedel-Kruse and his team have created three related projects that begin to define this new field of interactive biotechnology.

Two of these projects will be unveiled this week at the Computer Human Interactions (CHI) conference in Seoul, South Korea, while the third was recently published in PLoS Biology.

In one project the team created an arcade style kiosk that allowed visitors to The Tech Museum in San Jose to interact with living cells like fish in an aquarium.

In a second and similar effort, Riedel-Kruse developed a project to teach students how to design bioengineering devices by creating so-called biotic games using cells. This class also touched on the ethical principles of interacting with microorganisms for educational or entertainment purposes.

In his third and most far-reaching project, Riedel-Kruse created a robotic biology cloud lab capable of carrying out remote-controlled experiments.

"We call these robots Biotic Processing Units or BPUs," said Zahid Hossain, the Stanford PhD student who worked with Riedel-Kruse on this third project. (click for paper)

"A BPU is an instrument that can hold and repeatedly stimulate biological materials, such as cells, and measure the biological responses," Hossain said. "It is the key enabler of interactive biotechnology."

This cloud lab is being presented at the computer conference in South Korea. The intent was to enable students and scientists to send instructions to a robotic lab and get back experimental results - the way we interact with cloud-based data sites today.

Hossain constructed this prototype BPU by using LEGO Mindstorms to create a liquid handling robot. This robot traveled over a flatbed photo scanner. The scanner held petri dishes containing the slime mold Physarum, which eats oatmeal.

The researchers incorporated this BPU as a lab component in a graduate level theory class. Using remote control interfaces on their smart phones, students ordered the robot to drop oatmeal onto specific petri dishes. The software allowed them to choose different droplet patterns. The scanner recorded how the Physarum followed each trail of oatmeal dots by "sniffing out" chemical cues in the petri dishes. Chemotaxis is the scientific term used to describe how microrganisms respond to chemical stimuli in their environments.

For this project Riedel-Kruse's team built three BPUs, each holding six petri dishes. All three units were housed in a server rack typically found in a cloud computer site.

"Our prototype BPUs supported 18 users and allowed us to assess the scalability of cloud labs," Hossain said. "I want to see advanced BPUs supporting many different types of experiments and thousands of different users."

This cloud lab project won an honorable mention as a best paper at the computer conference.

The museum kiosk project, led by Seung Ah Lee, a postdoctoral fellow in the Riedel-Kruse lab, will also be presented in South Korea.

Lee explained that the kiosk allowed museum visitors to interact with Euglena, a freely swimming microorganism that typically lives in ponds.

Like plants, Euglena can convert sunlight into sugar through photosynthesis, and the interactive display capitalized on the organism's responses to light. In their interactive kiosk, the Euglena inhabited a micro-aquarium that was essentially a specially configured slide mounted between a video microscope and an image projector. This is slide or micro-aquarium was another instance of what the researchers call a BPU.

This self-contained micro-aquarium was connected to a touch-screen computer display. Museum visitors could use blue, green or red light to draw patterns on the screen and observe how the Euglena reacted. The microorganisms avoided blue light, so drawing a circle around one of the microbes would trap it, which became the name for one of the scientific mini-games the kiosk offered.

Riedel-Kruse also used the light-sensitive Euglena as the model organisms in the class he taught on biotic game design. Nate Cira, the bioengineering PhD student who led that effort, said their goal was to create a biotech version of popular robotic and video game challenges. He said the team plans to create low-cost kits that would allow hobbyists to construct their own interactive micro-aquariums.

To assess the educational value of these projects Riedel-Kruse worked with Stanford education professor Paulo Blikstein. The biotic game design class was jointly taught with bioengineering professor Stephen Quake.

Riedel-Kruse thinks that interactive biotechnology is a necessary and inevitable consequence of the maturation of the life sciences that will profoundly impact society similarly as computing technology has done..

"The obvious next application is online education at scale that including true biology experiments, also opening new opportunities for learning research. And cloud labs can change how we work as scientists." Riedel-Kruse said. "Ultimately, I hope these interactive media make everyone more understanding and comfortable about what microbiology and biotechnology really is."

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Immune system protein regulates sensitivity to bitter taste

2015-04-21
PHILADELPHIA (April 21, 2015) - New research from the Monell Center reveals that tumor necrosis factor (TNF), an immune system regulatory protein that promotes inflammation, also helps regulate sensitivity to bitter taste. The finding may provide a mechanism to explain the taste system abnormalities and decreased food intake that can be associated with infections, autoimmune disorders, and chronic inflammatory diseases. In addition to its role in mediating inflammation, TNF has been implicated in the progression of varied diseases ranging from Alzheimer's disease ...

Babies feel pain 'like adults'

2015-04-21
*World-first: MRI used to study infant pain *Finds 18 of 20 brain 'pain' regions activate in adults are active in babies *Also suggests infants are more sensitive to pain than adults *Highlights need to review pain relief for babies The brains of babies 'light up' in a very similar way to adults when exposed to the same painful stimulus, a pioneering Oxford University brain scanning study has discovered. It suggests that babies experience pain much like adults. The study looked at 10 healthy infants aged between one and six days old and 10 healthy adults aged ...

Listen to your heart: Why your brain may give away how well you know yourself

2015-04-21
In research published today in the journal Cerebral Cortex, a team of scientists led by the University of Cambridge and the Medical Research Council (MRC) Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, studied not only whether volunteers could be trained to follow their heartbeat, but whether it was possible to identify from brain activity how good they were at estimating their performance. Dr Tristan Bekinschtein, a Wellcome Trust Fellow and lecturer in the Department of Psychology at the University of Cambridge, says: "'Follow your heart' has become something of a cliché, ...

Dutch doctors withhold/withdraw treatment in many elderly patients

2015-04-21
Dutch doctors withhold/withdraw treatment in a substantial proportion of elderly patients, reveals research published online in the Journal of Medical Ethics. But their decisions don't seem to be driven by ageism; rather, they are more likely based on considerations of comfort and respect and the avoidance of futile treatment, conclude the researchers. In a bid to assess whether certain age groups are more likely to have treatment withheld or withdrawn, the researchers looked at a sample of deaths, stratified according to whether end of life decisions were likely or ...

UK doctors unlikely to be able to repay student loans

2015-04-21
UK doctors are unlikely to be able to repay their student loans over the course of their working lives, amassing debts of more than £80,000 by the time they graduate, in some cases, finds research published in the online journal BMJ Open. What's more, there are clear gender differences in the amount of cash required to service these debts, the analysis shows, with women paying more in interest, despite earning less than men. The researchers base their findings on the average earnings of 4286 doctors working more than 30 hours a week, who had taken part in national ...

The Lancet: Mindfulness-based therapy could offer an alternative to antidepressants for preventing depression relapse

2015-04-21
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) could provide an alternative non-drug treatment for people who do not wish to continue long-term antidepressant treatment, suggests new research published in The Lancet. The results come from the first ever large study to compare MBCT - structured training for the mind and body which aims to change the way people think and feel about their experiences - with maintenance antidepressant medication for reducing the risk of relapse in depression. The study aimed to establish whether MBCT is superior to maintenance antidepressant ...

South-Asian women more likely to be diagnosed with later stage breast cancer: Study

2015-04-21
TORONTO, ON, April 20, 2015 -- South Asian women are more likely to be diagnosed with later stage breast cancer compared to the general population, while Chinese women are more likely to be diagnosed with early stage cancer, according to a new study by Women's College Hospital and the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES). The findings, published today in the journal Current Oncology, confirm a strong link between ethnicity and breast cancer stage at diagnosis for Canadian women. An editorial by Dr. Aisha Lofters accompanies the paper and indicates that the ...

Statin use in elderly would prevent disease but could carry considerable side effects

2015-04-21
A new study by UC San Francisco has found that statins can help prevent disease in older adults but must be weighed against potentially serious side effects. Amid a projected cost of almost $900 billion for cardiovascular disease over the next decade in the U.S., statins are used by nearly half the elderly population in the nation. But in spite of the widespread use, there has been little systematic scrutiny of the potential risks of the drugs in older adults and whether those side effects could offset cardiovascular and other health benefits. For the statin study, ...

New breast cancer screening analysis confirms biennial interval optimal for average risk women

2015-04-21
WASHINGTON -- Results from a second comprehensive analysis of mammography screening, this time using data from digital mammography, confirms findings from a 2009 analysis of film mammography: biennial (every two years) screening offers a favorable balance of benefits to harm for women ages 50 to 74 who have an average risk of developing breast cancer. A technical report of the analysis is posted on the US Preventive Services Task Force's website and is cited as one piece of evidence for its 2015 draft recommendations for breast cancer screening with mammography. The ...

A bad buzz: Men with HIV need fewer drinks to feel effects

2015-04-21
New Haven, Conn. -- Researchers at Yale and the VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System compared the number of drinks that men with HIV infection, versus those without it, needed to get a buzz. They found that HIV-infected men were more sensitive to the effects of alcohol than uninfected men. The study published April 17 in the journal AIDS and Behavior. Researchers know that HIV and alcohol can make for a dangerous mix. "Alcohol makes it more likely you're going to get HIV due to risky sexual behavior," said Dr. Amy C. Justice, professor of medicine and public health at Yale. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Gene linked to epilepsy, autism decoded in new study

OHSU study finds big jump in addiction treatment at community health clinics

Location, location, location

Getting dynamic information from static snapshots

Food insecurity is significant among inhabitants of the region affected by the Belo Monte dam in Brazil

The Society of Thoracic Surgeons launches new valve surgery risk calculators

Component of keto diet plus immunotherapy may reduce prostate cancer

New circuit boards can be repeatedly recycled

Blood test finds knee osteoarthritis up to eight years before it appears on x-rays

April research news from the Ecological Society of America

Antimicrobial resistance crisis: “Antibiotics are not magic bullets”

Florida dolphin found with highly pathogenic avian flu: Report

Barcodes expand range of high-resolution sensor

DOE Under Secretary for Science and Innovation visits Jefferson Lab

Research expo highlights student and faculty creativity

Imaging technique shows new details of peptide structures

MD Anderson and RUSH unveil RUSH MD Anderson Cancer Center

Tomography-based digital twins of Nd-Fe-b magnets

People with rare longevity mutation may also be protected from cardiovascular disease

Mobile device location data is already used by private companies, so why not for studying human-wildlife interactions, scientists ask

Test reveals mice think like babies

From disorder to order: flocking birds and “spinning” particles

Cardiovascular risk associated with social determinants of health at individual and area levels

Experimental NIH malaria monoclonal antibody protective in Malian children

Energy trades could help resolve Nile conflict

Homelessness a major issue for many patients in the emergency department

Undocumented Latinx patients got COVID-19 vaccine at same rate as US citizens

ETRI develops an automated benchmark for labguage-based task planners

Revolutionizing memory technology: multiferroic nanodots for low-power magnetic storage

Researchers propose groundbreaking framework for future network systems

[Press-News.org] Stanford team makes biotechnology interactive with games and remote-control labs
Through special environments called biotic processing units, bioengineers let us interact with cells like fish in an aquarium or even do simple experiments using biolabs in the cloud