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Legacy article – Site history and miscellany

Where Cinema and Biology Meet

Original publication date
20 November 2010
Original section
Site history and miscellany
Original slug / legacy ID
where-cinema-and-biology-meet / 193
Restored on current site
martinpeniak.com/archive/writing/where-cinema-and-biology-meet/
Editing scope
Period voice retained; spelling and formatting lightly cleaned.

Originally published 20 November 2010 on the earlier martinpeniak.com site.

Preserved as site-history context from the earlier public site. The article keeps its period voice, with light formatting cleanup.

Dr. Lue is one of the pioneers of molecular animation, a rapidly growing field that seeks to bring the power of cinema to biology. Building on decades of research and mountains of data, scientists and animators are now recreating in vivid detail the complex inner machinery of living cells.

The field has spawned a new breed of scientist-animators who not only understand molecular processes but also have mastered the computer-based tools of the film industry. “The ability to animate really gives biologists a chance to think about things in a whole new way,” said Janet Iwasa, a cell biologist who now works as a molecular animator at Harvard Medical School.

excerpt from 'Where Cinema and Biology Meet' article published in The New York Times 

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