Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Lee, W. David, 1946- author.

Title From X-rays to DNA : how engineering drives biology / W. David Lee, with Jeffrey Drazen, Phillip A. Sharp, and Robert S. Langer
Published Cambridge, Massachusetts : The MIT Press, [2014]
©201 4

Copies

Description 1 online resource (xii, 233 pages) : illustrations
Contents An opportunity for greater discovery -- Concurrent engineering and science -- Engineering and the engineer -- Discovery of chromosomes and the submicrometer microscope -- DNA: gels, paper, and columns -- Structure of DNA and proteins: X-ray diffraction -- Observing DNA and protein in action: radioisotope labels -- Transcription and electron microscopy -- Protein and DNA automated sequencing -- Concurrent versus nonconcurrent engineering -- The engineers and scientists of concurrent engineering -- Institutions and teams for concurrent biology engineering -- Concurrent engineering in the clinic -- Unmet needs: mapping and understanding cell signaling -- Unmet needs: cancer example -- Summing up
Summary "Engineering has been an essential collaborator in biological research and breakthroughs in biology are often enabled by technological advances. Decoding the double helix structure of DNA, for example, only became possible after significant advances in such technologies as X-ray diffraction and gel electrophoresis. Diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis improved as new technologies -- including the stethoscope, the microscope, and the X-ray -- developed. These engineering breakthroughs take place away from the biology lab, and many years may elapse before the technology becomes available to biologists. In this book, David Lee argues for concurrent engineering -- the convergence of engineering and biological research -- as a means to accelerate the pace of biological discovery and its application to diagnosis and treatment. He presents extensive case studies and introduces a metric to measure the time between technological development and biological discovery. Investigating a series of major biological discoveries that range from pasteurization to electron microscopy, Lee finds that it took an average of forty years for the necessary technology to become available for laboratory use. Lee calls for new approaches to research and funding to encourage a tighter, more collaborative coupling of engineering and biology. Only then, he argues, will we see the rapid advances in the life sciences that are critically needed for life-saving diagnosis and treatment."
Analysis BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES/General
INFORMATION SCIENCE/Technology & Policy
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Biomedical engineering.
Medicine -- Research -- History
Medical instruments and apparatus -- Technological innovations
Surgical instruments and apparatus -- Technological innovations
Biomedical Engineering
Biomedical Technology
biomedical engineering.
HEALTH & FITNESS -- Holism.
HEALTH & FITNESS -- Reference.
MEDICAL -- Alternative Medicine.
MEDICAL -- Atlases.
MEDICAL -- Essays.
MEDICAL -- Family & General Practice.
MEDICAL -- Holistic Medicine.
MEDICAL -- Osteopathy.
Biomedical engineering
Medical instruments and apparatus -- Technological innovations
Medicine -- Research
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Drazen, Jeffrey M., 1946- author.
Sharp, Phillip A., author.
Langer, Robert S., author.
ISBN 9781461952183
1461952182
9780262318389
0262318385
9780262318396
0262318393
1306140668
9781306140669