NASA/JAXA Precipitation Measurement Satellite GO for Feb. 27 Launch Watch Live Here on NASA TV

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Visualization of the GPM Core Observatory and Partner Satellites. GPM is slated to launch on Feb. 27 from Japan. Credit: NASA See launch animation, Shinto ceremony, Rocket roll out and more below

NASA GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER, MARYLAND Blastoff of the powerful and revolutionary new NASA/JAXA rain and snow precipitation measurement satellite atop a Japanese rocket from a tiny offshore island launch pad is now less than 24 hours away on Thursday, Feb. 27, EST (Feb. 28 JST).

The Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) Core Observatory aimed at improving forecasts of extreme weather and climate change research has been given a green light for launch atop a Mitsubishi Heavy Industries H-IIA rocket from the Tanegashima Space Center on Tanegashima Island off southern Japan.

Roll out of the H-IIA launch vehicle from the Vehicle Assembly Building is scheduled for this evening, Feb. 26 at 11 p.m. EST.

Update: rocket rolled out. Photo below, plus watch streaming NASA TV below.

Following the Launch Readiness Review, mission managers approved the GO for liftoff.

The H-IIA rocket with GPM rolls to its launch pad in Japan! Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls

Japanese team members also prayed at a Shinto ceremony for blessings for a successful launch at the Ebisu Shrine, the first shrine in a traditional San-ja Mairi, or Three Shrine Pilgrimage on Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2014 see photo below.

However, the team also set a newly revised launch time of 1:37 p.m. EST (18:37 UTC, and Feb. 28 at 3:37 a.m. JST).

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NASA/JAXA Precipitation Measurement Satellite GO for Feb. 27 Launch Watch Live Here on NASA TV

Brummie astronaut Trevor Beattie's preparation for space travel is going swimmingly

28 Feb 2014 10:54

Advertising guru behind FCUK and Wonderbra to be on inaugural commercial Virgin Galactic flight

Birmingham's first astronaut Trevor Beattie is preparing to take the plunge for his three-hour flight into space by learning the butterfly stroke.

The advertising tycoon paid a $250,000 deposit for his place on the inaugural Virgin Galactic space flight nine years ago and says swimming skills hold the key to an ultimately successful mission.

The Balsall Heath-born entrepreneur, best known for his French Connection, FCUK and Wonderbra ads, says mastering the butterfly could be vital for his once-in-a-lifetime journey.

Trevor, 53, suffered a broken toe in a zero gravity training flight over California last October when a fellow passenger fell on him, but said he was now fully recovered in preparation for the space mission.

The West Midlander will take his place on board for the second Virgin Galactic flight following Richard Branson and his family but does not know when the mission will take place.

I had a lot of callers thinking that I was in intensive care following the toe incident but I am now fighting fit.

The only proper training for this is swimming you are weightless and you are controlling your breathing. If you can learn the butterfly, that is a good way to train. It is not about physical fitness, your body weight is immaterial.

I have not swum since I was a kid I have got to get back into it. I would like to think that I could do some of my training at Moseley Baths.

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Brummie astronaut Trevor Beattie's preparation for space travel is going swimmingly

Last Shuttle Commander Virtually Flies Boeing CST-100 to Space Station

HOUSTON, Feb. 27, 2014-- Chris Ferguson, Boeing's director of Crew and Mission Operations and commander of the final Space Shuttle flight, virtually returned to space recently in the Boeing [NYSE: BA] Crew Space Transportation (CST)-100 simulator to satisfy a NASA testing requirement for the spacecraft.

Ferguson performed manual piloting activities including on-orbit attitude and translation maneuvers, docking and backing away from a virtual International Space Station and a manual re-entry to Earth in the simulator.

"It was great to be back in the pilots seat, even if I didn't leave the ground," Ferguson said. "It's important for the spacecraft to have manual controls because although it's designed to be largely autonomous, the pilot should always be able to back up that autonomy. Manual flight controls provide a sort of a belt-and-suspenders capability for piloting the spacecraft."

The testing for NASA officials satisfied a CST-100 development milestone known as "Pilot in the Loop." It is the final milestone before the spacecraft's critical design review.

Ferguson, a veteran of three shuttle missions and commander of STS-135, the final shuttle flight, has logged more than 40 days in space and 5,700 hours in high-performance aircraft. He now oversees the crew interface of the Boeing CST-100 spacecraft and plays a key role in development and testing of system concepts and technologies for the vehicle and integrated launch and ground systems.

"This was the one opportunity to really show off, from a user's perspective, just how real our vehicle is becoming," said Ferguson. "We demonstrated that the CST-100 is on track to return Americans to space in an American spacecraft."

The Boeing-developed simulator will be used for astronaut training as part of a full suite ot training devices for crew members and mission controllers.

More information about the future of human space exploration can be found atwww.beyondearth.com.

A unit of The Boeing Company,Boeing Defense, Space & Securityis one of the world's largest defense, space and security businesses specializing in innovative and capabilities-driven customer solutions, and the worlds largest and most versatile manufacturer of military aircraft. Headquartered in St. Louis, Boeing Defense, Space & Security is a $33 billion business with 58,000 employees worldwide. Follow us on Twitter:@BoeingDefense.

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Last Shuttle Commander Virtually Flies Boeing CST-100 to Space Station

Review: 'The Red Road' heads toward mystery

Years of amateur and professional TV-watching and the impressive title attached to my byline notwithstanding, I have never believed that I would last a minute as a television programmer. I know what I like, and usually why I like it, but what will float and what will sink on the great waters of commerce I admit to be beyond my ken.

Still, had anyone in charge at Sundance Channel (now calling itself SundanceTV) asked me whether the network should follow its fine "Top of the Lake," "The Returned" and "Rectify" slow, atmospheric, morally ambiguous, semi-rural stories of crime and family in which old wounds are opened and buried secrets surface with a fourth such series, I might have suggested it was time for a big-city screwball romance or something with unicorns.

Between those shows and the likes of "The Killing" and "The Bridge" and "True Detective" and "Low Winter Sun" (which I, and possibly I alone, watched to the end) elsewhere on the dial, there has been an abundance of such stuff how much moodiness can the system take?

BEST TV OF 2013Lloyd | McNamara

But consistency counts for something when you're building a brand. And "The Red Road," which begins Thursday on the network, is to judge by the first two of six episodes very good. Set in a fictional New Jersey woodland town and concerning in part an Indian tribe, the Lenape, it is the product of an impressive trust of talent.

Executive producer Sarah Condon (HBO's "Looking" and "Bored to Death," but also Nickelodeon classic "Clarissa Explains It All") sent creator Aaron Guzikowski ("Prisoners") news stories about the Lenape, community relations and toxic waste. Show runner Bridget Carpenter spent five years on "Friday Night Lights"; James Gray ("Little Odessa," "The Immigrant") directed the tone-setting first episode.

It is not as uncanny as the Sundance series it follows many of its constituent parts and players and dramatic relations are familiar ones, even the way in which some ostensibly good characters might compromise themselves and some clearly bad characters are shown to be something more than less than human. The symmetrical balance and historical connectedness of the two male leads Martin Henderson's cop, Jason Momoa's ex-con, tied by the troubled woman who is now Henderson's wife (a terrific Julianne Nicholson) feels almost too perfect at times.

PHOTOS: TV shows and their spinoffs

And yet, though many seeds are quickly sewn there is a missing college student, a literally forbidden romance, a prodigal son's return, a mother's shaky mental state it is hard, in a good way, to see where it's headed, past the more obvious personal entanglements and somewhat-beside-the-point criminal actions. It feels productively mysterious.

The show tells you covertly a lot about the characters, building them up through bits of behavior and stray remarks that can seem contradictory at first but do start to cohere into something more complex. Henderson is, it's true, called on to sweat a lot before the story gets very far at all.

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Review: 'The Red Road' heads toward mystery

Name a Red Planet crater for $5

A dramatic, fresh impact crater on Mars dominates this image taken by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on Nov. 19, 2013. NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona

Naming landmarks on Mars isn't just for scientists and rover drivers anymore.

Starting today (Feb. 26), anybody with an Internet connection and a few dollars to spare can give a moniker to one of the Red Planet's 500,000 or so unnamed craters, as part of a mapping project run by the space-funding company Uwingu.

"This is the first people's map of Mars, where anybody can play," said Uwingu CEO Alan Stern, a former NASA science chief who also heads the space agency's New Horizons mission to Pluto. "It's a very social thing." [7 Biggest Mysteries of Mars]

Putting your stamp on Mars isn't free. Naming the smallest craters will set you back $5, with prices going up as crater size increases. Uwingu will use the money raised by the project -- which could be more than $10 million, if people name every available Martian crater -- to fund grants in space exploration, research and education, which is the company's stated chief purpose.

"We're developing this grant fund -- the Uwingu fund -- for people who've been hit by sequestration," Stern told Space.com. "There's nothing like it right now. They have no place to go; it's either NASA, NSF [the National Science Foundation] or you're out of luck."

Stern hopes the effort will succeed in naming all of Mars' cataloged craters by the end of 2014, helping to fill in a lot of gaps in Red Planet cartography. (The company aims to solicit names for other Red Planet features, such as canyons and mountains, in the future.)

The project could also provide a sort of cultural snapshot, revealing what people are thinking about and what's important to them at this moment, he added.

"It's like taking a picture of ourselves," Stern said. "What will people put? Will there be a lot of craters named for politicians? For artists, for relatives, for places on Earth? Sports teams?"

The crater-naming project is not a contest, working instead on a first-come, first-served basis. Names will be accepted immediately and will remain approved unless Uwingu officials later determine them to be profane or otherwise offensive.

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Name a Red Planet crater for $5

Storm advice given to Daytona 500 fans missed the mark, agencies say

As a storm approaching the Daytona International Speedway on Sunday triggered a tornado warning, track officials flashed a message to fans looking for shelter.

The American Red Cross recommends that if you seek shelter in your vehicle, fasten the seat belt and turn the motor on, the message read.

Thursday, a spokeswoman for the Red Cross said the advice was taken from their tornado safety guidelines, but not as their primary recommendation.

Reaction: Tornado warning at Daytona 500

I think it might just be taking some wording out of context, said Amber Bierfreund of the agencys Jacksonville office. Nobody was hurt.

Lenny Santiago, a Daytona International Speedway spokesman, said the speedway wasnt instructing people to seek shelter in their vehicles, but just providing information from the Red Cross. He said many fans watching Sundays race camped at the 500-acre property, which is mostly open land, and were at their campsites during the warning. For them, he said, a vehicle might have been the only shelter.

Thursday, he said the message was probably out of context.

He said the message was extracted from Red Cross guidelines and the wording constructed to be posted on screens focused on the infield.

We only had a certain amount of characters, he said.

Because many of the thousands of race fans at the track are near their vehicles, they might choose to find shelter there.

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Storm advice given to Daytona 500 fans missed the mark, agencies say

NASA cries planetary 'bonanza'

NASA has announced a torrent of new planet discoveries, hailing a "bonanza" of 715 worlds now known outside the solar system thanks to the Kepler space telescope's planet-hunting mission.

A new method for verifying potential planets led to the volume of new discoveries from Kepler, which aims to help humans search for other worlds that may be like earth.

"What we have been able to do with this is strike the mother lode, get a veritable exoplanet bonanza," Jack Lissauer, a planetary scientist at NASA, told reporters.

"We have almost doubled just today the number of planets known to humanity," he said.

The 715 newly verified planets are orbiting 305 different stars.

The latest announcement brings the number of known planets to nearly 1700.

Not much is known about the composition of these distant planets and whether they would truly have the conditions that would support life, such as a rocky surface, water and a distance from their stars that leaves them neither too hot nor too cold.

Four of them are potentially in the habitable zone of their stars and are about the size of earth, NASA said.

Most of the new discoveries are in "multiple-planet systems much like our own solar system", and 95 per cent are between the size of earth and Neptune, which is four times larger than our planet, said the US space agency.

Most are also very close to their stars.

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NASA cries planetary 'bonanza'

Nanotechnology needs standards

Reading the pagesof theMaterials Today website you cannot help but notice the number of times nanotechnology is mentioned, it could be concerning a new drug that might one day cure Cancer or in a new electronic device that might tell us if there is life on Mars. Surprisingly though, nanotechnology is still not completely understood by many including Governments and economic leaders who would benefit from clear position statements, guidelines andstandards outlining the responsible use of nanomaterials in today's society. Consensus standards should beemployed more widelyas a sure step to improving the information in the public domain which may provide non scientists and scientists alike, with the facts, background and understanding requiredintheir roles.Consensus standardsas the name suggests are agreed through voting and resolution, usually created by standards bodies, with process and interim results laid open to public scrutiny and review. As an example consensus standards play a critical role in the medical devices industry, not only on the material level but also in the end function of the device. Without these standards related industry, surgeons, doctors, healthcare workersand medical centers would have a very difficultmarket in which to function safely and efficiently. For the field of nanotechnology to continue to flourish, develop and play a key role across all major sectors, general and technical consensus standards need to be put in place as quickly as possible to ensure ambiguity and bad practices do not tarnish an opportunity that many are claiming is the next big thing to move our society and economy forward.

Listen to our interview with Prof. Robert Hurt, Editor of Carbon, on a proposed nomenclature for 2D carbon materials. The article, published in Carbon, is available to download.

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Nanotechnology needs standards

Top Nanotechnology Expert Joins UVA

Charlottesville, VA (PRWEB) February 27, 2014

Recognizing the potential of microscopic nanotechnology to revolutionize the field of medicine, the University of Virginia has recruited one of the nations top experts to serve as co-director of the Institute for Nanoscale and Quantum Scientific and Technological Advanced Research (nanoSTAR). In his new role, Mark Kester, PhD, will seek to foster cutting-edge interdisciplinary research at UVA that will produce important medical breakthroughs and transform how medicine is practiced in the 21st century.

Kesters hiring will bolster the School of Medicines involvement in nanoSTAR, a pioneering program that brings together researchers from across the university, including the School of Engineering & Applied Science, the Curry School of Education, the Darden School of Business and the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences. Stu Wolf, PhD, director of nanoSTAR, said Kesters arrival will advance the groups mission of using nanotechnology to accomplish the previously impossible. As the new co-director of nanoSTAR, Dr. Mark Kester brings a key new dimension to our institute, Wolf said. His connection to nano-medicine and the medical school will enable nanoSTAR to move forward on many new fronts of great importance to nanoscience, nanotechnology and of course UVA.

Transforming Cancer Care Kesters work focuses on the use of nanotechnologies to deliver drugs for cancer treatment. By coating microscopic amounts of drugs or molecular agents in nontoxic wrappers, treatments that would otherwise be harmful or deadly to a patient can be administered and directed to just where theyre needed.

Nanos allow us to protect and package the therapeutic and deliver it stealthily, Kester said. Basically, I design FedEx trucks. Theyre designed to deliver on time, all the time, to the tumor.

Past and Future Kester comes to UVA from the Penn State Hershey College of Medicine, where he was the G. Thomas Passananti Professor of Pharmacology and the inaugural director of the Penn State Center for NanoMedicine and Materials. He has founded several companies devoted to the development of what he calls nanoSolutions. Hes also co-author of the lauded Integrated Pharmacology textbook.

In his new role at nanoSTAR, Kester said, he aims to expand the research interactions between engineers and scientists, while also fostering collaborations with the College of Arts & Sciences, Darden, the Curry School and the School of Law. These collaborations would explore the many ethical, legal, commercial and intellectual issues associated with nanotech. He also intends to enhance the role of nanotechnology applications in the School of Medicines curriculum.

In addition to his role with nanoSTAR, Kester will serve as a professor of pharmacology at the School of Medicine.

For Reporters: Kester will be available for interviews this morning. To arrange an interview, contact Josh Barney at 434.906.8864 or jdb9a(at)virginia(dot)edu.

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Top Nanotechnology Expert Joins UVA

Concise Analysis of the International Biochips and Microarrays Market

DUBLIN, Feb. 27, 2014 /PRNewswire/ --

Research and Markets

(

http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/2cs339/biochips_and

) has announced the addition of a new report

"Concise Analysis of the International Biochips and Microarrays Market"

to their offering.

(Logo:http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130307/600769)

This report is an analysis of biochip/microarray markets based on technologies and applications. The report starts with a description of technologies as a basis for estimation of markets. Technologies include array comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), copy number variation (CNV), DNA methylation, ChIP-Chip, RNA splice variants, and microRNA. Separate chapters are devoted to protein biochips/microarrays, microfluidics and nanobiotechnology-based nano-arrays.

Various applications of biochips and microarrays are described throughout the report. Areas of application such as point-of-care, genetic screening, cancer, and diagnosis of infections are included. Separate chapters are devoted to applications in drug discovery and development as well as personalized medicine

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Concise Analysis of the International Biochips and Microarrays Market

Contractors complete steel structure on Quad-C of Nano Utica project

MARCY Construction crews have completed the steel structure ahead of schedule in the construction of the $125 million computer-chip commercialization center (Quad-C). The office of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo today acknowledged it in a news release as a key moment in the first phase of Cuomos $1.5 billion Nano Utica initiative.

The State University of New York College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering (SUNY CNSE) and the SUNY Institute of Technology (SUNYIT) are spearheading the effort.

Nano Utica is the public-private partnership that Cuomo announced last October thats intended to bring more than 1,500 jobs to the region.

Its also meant to further define New York as the global leader in nanotechnology-based research and development, Cuomos office said in the news release.

Not only will this project create over a thousand new high-skilled, high-paying jobs, but it marks New Yorks emergence as a world leader in the nanotechnology sector. Quad-C will be the catalyst for nanotechnology innovation, education, and economic development in New York. The project is ahead of schedule and exciting things lay ahead, Cuomo said in the news release.

Lt. Gov. Robert Duffy presided over the ceremony in Marcy.

With great thanks to Gov. Cuomos strategic vision for growth, the past three years have proven to be enormous for the nanotechnology industry in many regions of the state. The latest announcement here today in Utica, that construction on the Quad-C facility is ahead of schedule, helps to ensure the continued development and utilization of everything that the Mohawk Valley has to offer, Duffy said in the news release.

Crews will complete construction on Quad-C by the end of 2014, Cuomos office said.

The 253,000-square-foot facility will include 56,000 square feet of Class 1 capable clean-room space stacked on two levels.

An annual operating budget of over $500 million will support 1,500 high-tech jobs and the establishment of academic programs and cutting-edge workforce training opportunities.

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Contractors complete steel structure on Quad-C of Nano Utica project

Why Ssangyong does not believe in frugal engineering

And aspires to be a premium brand in the SUV space across the world

February 27, 2014:

Yoo II Lee shakes his head when the topic veers around to frugal engineering. The President & CEO of SsangYong Motor Company clearly does not subscribe to this concept which has become some sort of a style statement in the automobile industry.

Frugal engineering is something I do not agree with because you cannot compete globally with this concept. Low cost from the point of savings is fine but this should not mean a low quality car, Lee told Business Line at the Delhi Auto Expo earlier this month.

As he puts it, frugal engineering may be accepted by very low-income groups. The SsangYong chief then brings up the example of China where one can only find top-end brands. Likewise, people in India are also looking for big cars like BMW and Audi. They want good performance, not cheap cars.

Origins

Frugal engineering became a fashionable term thanks to Carlos Ghosn, the charismatic CEO of Renault-Nissan. The roots perhaps go back to the time of the Tata Nano which hit the headlines nearly eight years ago with its unbelievable price tag of Rs 1-lakh. Ghosn made no bones about his admiration for this initiative and believes frugal engineering holds the key for automakers success quotient in emerging markets where price plays a big role in the buying decision.

Clearly, Lee is not on the same page and wants SsangYong to remain in a premium space with its SUVs. Its owner, Mahindra & Mahindra which acquired the company three years ago, focuses on a more realistic price spectrum since its home base, India, is one of the cost-competitive auto markets in the world.

Yet, the two have been working towards a successful partnership which saw 2013 register one of the best years for SsangYong with sales of nearly 1.5 lakh units. The target is to double this by the end of 2016 a remarkable turnaround for this Korean automaker which was literally in the dumps not-so-long ago.

Yet, there are critical gaps which need to be filled quickly if SsangYong has to emerge a lot stronger in the coming years. The one thing we do not have is auto transmission which we are buying from outside. This remains our weakest point. Mahindras should consider having its own auto transmission plant in Korea which will help SsangYong become a complete automaker, he adds.

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Why Ssangyong does not believe in frugal engineering

Uganda: Uganda's Cheap Bike Problem

The Nano is a small, cheap car manufactured by Indian multinational Tata. At a cost equivalent to US$2,000, it promised to offer personal transport to Indians who previously couldn't afford it. Though that may be true, last month The Guardian reported that the vehicle achieved a zero-star rating in crash tests conducted by Global NCAP, a UK-based safety assessor.

Overall, the article suggested that the car's poor performance may have been due to its 'frugal engineering'. This approach, intended to keep costs down, meant the vehicle had no air bags and "poor structural integrity".

Joseph Magoola, currently studying for a master's degree in public health at Makerere University in Kampala, Uganda, writes a regular blog on road safety in his country. He says that cheap, badly designed vehicles are causing deaths and misery in his country. But rather than cars, he singles out the motorbike taxis known as boda-bodas as his particular worry.

People use the bikes because they are designed to be affordable, fuel efficient and easy to manoeuvre through the city's traffic jams, Magoola tells me. But little attention is paid to safety, he says, either when the bike was designed, or by the police and government who should have implemented safety measures.

"They are totally not safe," he says. "The riders are reckless. They are not trained on how to use the bikes. There is nobody that regulates them, so whoever can buy one can use it on the roads."

Boda-bodas are becoming the leading cause of crashes on Kampala's roads, Magoola says. And he points me to research showing that more than 62 per cent of the surgery budget at the city's Mulago hospital is consumed treating people who have been in boda-boda accidents. [2]

Magoola says there have been several politically initiated safety campaigns in recent years, but none has been backed up by a "proper, long-term policy".

"We know what needs to be done: measures like speed humps, wearing helmets and separating pedestrians and motorbikes," he says. But, so far, politicians have failed to formalise a policy to put these ideas in place.

To try and put pressure on them, Magoola regularly takes to his keyboard. "The thinking behind my blog is to use it as an advocacy tool," he says.

References

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Uganda: Uganda's Cheap Bike Problem

The data cure: The changing science of biology and its impact on your health care

Molecular biologist and science policy leader Professor Keith Yamamoto discusses the current revolution in biological sciences and the emerging field of precision medicine.

SHANE HUNTINGTON Im Dr Shane Huntington, thanks for joining us. Scientists have long laboured to understand life and its complex processes. Their work through the centuries has brought us all enormous benefit, from the development of drugs to treat once incurable diseases, to an increasingly sophisticated understanding of the ecological impact of human activities on the planet. As we expand our investigations into data rich fields like genomics and personalised healthcare, biology is becoming a field populated not just by biologists but also by mathematicians, physicists and statisticians. Biology as a result is changing. Naturally these changes bring the promise of better healthcare standards for people with a cancer or other life threatening conditions, as well as preventative measures to keep people well in the first place. But are we really prepared for this revolution in biology? Do we need to adjust their educational models to make sure we equip health researchers with the right skills? How will this affect the type of healthcare systems we'll have in the coming decades? To answer these questions and discuss the broader implications of a new view of biology, we are joined on Up Close by molecular biologist Professor Keith Yamamoto, Vice Chancellor for Research, Executive Vice Dean of the School of Medicine and Professor of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology at the University of California, San Francisco. Keith is in Melbourne as a guest of the ICT For Life Sciences forum. Welcome to Up Close Keith.

KEITH YAMAMOTO Thank you, it's nice to be here.

SHANE HUNTINGTON The field of biology has changed dramatically since you began your research career in the 1970s. Can you give us an idea of the main differences in how biology is practised now compared to back in those days?

KEITH YAMAMOTO We're at a very interesting time in biology and in science in general. Biological research at the time that I started in the 1970s as you said, was very much a descriptive field. We'd look through microscopes and examined cells, took pictures of them, did experiments in biochemistry where we would break down specific cellular components and look for the presence and absence of a signal. That descriptive period was a wonderful one. Ones where we gained immeasurably in our understanding of the components that are players in biological processes and understanding the framework - an outline - of the way that those biological processes work. Today things have changed a lot because we have realised that if we're going to move forward from collection of information, naming the players that are involved in the play to actually understanding those processes. Understanding them in ways that we can intercept them or modify them then we have to become a quantitative field. We have to understand things in numerical detail. And to do that biology needs to invite into the field - and it's doing this progressively successfully - scientists who practice their work in a different way. People who are doing physics and chemistry and math and computation and engineering, who'd bring a different way of thinking about problems, as well as working on them. So that's the transition; it's a remarkable one that we're just in the midst of right now.

SHANE HUNTINGTON Now I have to dig a little bit there when you refer to biology as a quantitative field in the current day and in the future, how do you define that relative to what it's done in the past? Certainly I think a lot of biologists would assume they were doing a quantitative version of a research.

KEITH YAMAMOTO Right. So we were able to infer biological processes and even the ways that those processes and even the ways that those processes worked with descriptive means, looking in a microscope to look at the change and the shape of a cell for example. Or the cells that a particular cell would choose to interact with; maybe even merge with and fuse with. Those kinds of descriptions carried us a long way in making theories about exactly how those processes worked. But they don't actually tell us how the processes work. So now the next step is to understand those processes using quantitative methods of engineering and chemistry and physics that will bring us the real numbers behind those observations. It's those numbers that turn out to give us the mechanistic detail to be able to carry forward. The real test of understanding something in a sense is being able to reproduce it yourself - by putting the pieces together and the steps together - the [imagines] working. So we're getting an outline of the players but don't know how to put them together well enough. We don't know whether when we put together a reaction in a descriptive mode whether when it looks like it's working whether it's working the same way that it works in the cell. But getting the numbers behind it all will tell us that. That level of understanding is crucial for doing some of the things that you talked about in your introductory statement where we have the chance to be able to understand them well enough to be able to intercept disease mechanisms and things of that sort.

SHANE HUNTINGTON This presumably will mean that we have to look at our education models - especially at university level - for training biologists. Is the current version adequate to deal with this new biology that you speak of? Or do we have to go back to the drawing board and start redescribing the way in which a biologist will go about their day?

KEITH YAMAMOTO I think we have to go back to the drawing board. But it's going back to the drawing board in I think exciting ways that are going to extend further back from the graduate period of training into undergraduate and even earlier and that is finding a common language for all of these different scientists to speak. The work has gone forward in ways that have taken us to more and more hyper-specialisation. So there are biologists who speak different languages and really can't communicate well with each other. You can imagine what happens when we begin to try to interact with engineers and physicists. So we're at a stage where finding that common language will have a huge payoff; it's going to be very exciting. And we can begin doing that early on. One of the things that we're doing in the University of California, San Francisco UCSF where I work is to begin bringing our first year graduate students together in teams in which the team members - four or five people - come with different backgrounds. Some have been training in physics, some have been training in molecular biology, some have been training in computer science. Bringing them together in teams and then having them to go through a series of so-called boot camp courses - very short intensive courses - intended to bring everyone up to a common level of literacy. And they see immediately the different languages, but somebody on the team understands the language and other people don't and they begin interacting with each other and teaching each other right away. You can see that that can be done any time, it doesn't have to wait until graduate school. So we think that that kind of model can actually get us to where we need to go, not only painlessly but in a way that's fun and interesting.

SHANE HUNTINGTON In that model you're not just talking about retraining the language skills of the biologists, but the other fields as well - the physicists. So it's a two way process isn't it?

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The data cure: The changing science of biology and its impact on your health care