The melatonin cycle is roughly 25 hrs, and is under genetic control.
Can you build a 24 hour clock inside my head by using DNA computing? Like in the future with jetpacks and everything.
Well, it's one of the most important papers ever written relating to our field.
...there is already such a clock, that's why you get jet lag ^^.
And I have no real idea what you mean.
I guess with some influence of light, right?
...er....uh....ask in 50 years again.
Seriously, neurosciences are not that advanced, we're far away from understanding our brain.
That might somewhen be doable (probably in another way like we might think atm, I'd rather think of brain-computer interfaces, with some sort of support function), but I'd not really seriously expect it.
I know. That's why said in the future with jetpacks and stuff. Just wanted to know how feasible it was.
Not too long ago, a paper made waves claiming to have found proteins in dinosaur fossils. From a protein, one could recreate a DNA sequence, though that's like saying we recovered one fragment sentence from the Bible. It's not going to tell you much of the story. I was pretty skeptical of the paper when I first read it though, so I'm not even sure the proteins will turn out to be a real find.
No-one expects you to read Newtons original paper "Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica", well partly because it's in friggin latin, but mostly because there is no need.
I also didn't read Einstein's original, German (yeah, not going to happen), papers when I studied the Theory of Relativity.
They have been expanded on, improved, partly debunked and so on.
Other than the historical value, why should you?
It is quite interesting how the things we take for granted were found out and how much of the significance of their research was grasped back then. And it lets you spam more references in the introduction of your thesis
My question:
As the first examples of quantum effects in biology have been found, how much of a role does quantum physics play in biological systems in your opinion?
It is proposed that the whole world of consciousness, the mental world, is microgranular, with mental units called psychons, and that in mind-brain interaction one psychon is linked to one dendron through quantum physics.
As the first examples of quantum effects in biology have been found, how much of a role does quantum physics play in biological systems in your opinion?
What jobs do the biologists here have/want in the future?