News
A quick look at the main photo of this piece might have you thinking you’re looking at some type of cell culture growing on a Petri dish, as seen through the magical power of a microscope.
Stem-cell researcher Toshiro Sato places a culture dish under the microscope in his laboratory at Keio University School of Medicine in Tokyo. What he sees is not a sheet of cells, but something ...
For the first time, scientists can directly image cells in their native wet environment with a standard scanning electron microscope (SEM), thanks to new technology introduced by QuantomiX. Applying ...
Last year, mini-brains were spun from stem cells in cell culture. Maybe one day soon scientists will be able to assemble an entire human organ system, in miniature. You Might Also Like ...
This is a video I took of a neuron in a culture dish that I was just about to toss out. I looked at it under the microscope and saw that something interesting was about to happen, so set up a ...
Other samples, such as tumor spheroids, organoids, and all kinds of culture cell lines, can now be imaged with more than 80 frames per second in full frame 2048 x 2048-pixel resolution up to 500 ...
Scanning electron microscope image of a neural culture that has been growing for more than six months. Dr Brett J. Kagan Scientists used software to analyze instances when the neurons missed.
Scientists have demonstrated that clusters of brain cells in a lab dish can be taught to play Pong in an approximation of sentience. This is the first time that these cells have performed goal ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results