An easily assembled smartphone microscope provides new ways of interacting with and learning about common microbes. The open-source device could be used by teachers or in other educational settings, ...
The downtown Troy studio is developing games to go along with a smartphone microscope meant to engage more kids in science. 1st Playable Productions is developing games to go along with a smartphone ...
Introducing the LudusScope, a 3D-printed, open-sourced system that lets you control and play games with living microbes on your smartphone. Tormenting single-celled organisms has never been so much ...
Some people start down their career path at a young age, and toys can often be the catalyst. To entice kids into the field of microbiology, scientists at Stanford have developed a DIY smartphone ...
This is a preview. Log in through your library . Abstract The microanatomy of the eyespot apparatus of Euglena gracilis Z was examined with the electron microscope. The stigma was found to be a ...
A new 3-D printed, easily assembled smartphone microscope developed at Stanford University turns microbiology into game time. The device allows kids to play games or make more serious observations ...
Centuries after its discovery, the microscopic realm of microorganisms remains disconnected from the macro-world of direct human perception, but that doesn’t mean its effects are not felt. A 2012 ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results