If Stephen Quake gets his way, biologists in the future will spend a lot less time wielding pipettes. “Our goal,” he says, “is to create computational tools so that cell biology goes from being 90% ...
D printing creates solid objects from the additive process of layering plastics, metal, wood, synthetic fibers, and more.
What if scientists could build a realistic model of the human lung, not full-sized, but grown in the lab from living cells?