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  • Published
    15 Images

    Best science art of 2012

    The natural world is filled with gorgeous creatures, strange processes and mysterious structures hidden to the naked eye. The winners of the 2012 International Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge, announced Thursday, make that beauty visible.

  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_1
    A Cognitive Computer, Based on the Macaque BrainIllustration - First Place: Inspired by the neural architecture of a macaque brain, this ghostly neon swirl is the wiring diagram for a new kind of computer that, by some definitions, may soon be able to think.
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    McQuinn, Wong, Datta, Flickner, Singh, Esser, Appuswamy
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_2
    Cerebral InfiltrationIllustration - Honorable Mention and People’s Choice: A malignant brain tumor (red mass, left) of this person's brain, wreathed by fine tracts of white matter. The red fibers signal danger: If severed by the neurosurgeon's scalpel, their loss could affect the patient's vision, perception, and motor function.
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    Sherbrooke Connectivity Imaging Lab
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_3
    Biomineral Single CrystalsPhotography - First Place and People's Choice: These fantastical structures are the microscopic crystals that make up a sea urchin's tooth. Each shade of blue, aqua, green, and purple--superimposed with Photoshop on a scanning electron micrograph (SEM)--highlights an individual crystal of calcite, the abundant carbonate mineral found in limestone, marble, and shells.
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    University of Wisconsin, Madison
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_4
    Self DefensePhotography - Honorable Mention: This is no shell game, but a matter of life or death. The clam (left) can snap its bivalve shell shut at the first sign of a threat. The whelk (right) has evolved another strategy: The spiral shell provides a series of barricades to potential invaders. 
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    Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_5
    X-ray micro-radiography and microscopy of seedsPhotography - Honorable Mention: Furred, fringed, and barbed, these fruits with tiny seeds are each no bigger than 3 mm across. To image the seeds' fine detail, the team used high-resolution, high-contrast x-rays along with traditional microscopy.
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    Charles University / Czech Technical University
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_6
    Owl Adaptations vs. Extreme Neck RotationPosters & Graphics - First Place: Instead of moving their large, tubular eyes in their sockets, owls swivel their heads 270 degrees. This poster explains the likely mechanism for the eerie ability.
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    Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_7
    Earth Evolution: The Intersection of Geology and BiologyPosters & Graphics - Honorable Mention: All 4.6 billion years of Earth's history are squeezed onto this poster (only a portion is shown here). The poster draws connections between biological and geological processes in Earth's history, such as mass extinctions, plate tectonics, and the greenhouse effect.
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    HHMI / Astronaut 3 Media Group / Harvard University
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_8
    The Pharma Transport TownPosters & Graphics - People's Choice: This information graphic shows the complex transport routes of pharmaceuticals in the environment, and considers psychological influences upon drug usage and disposal. It illustrates the cyclical nature of pharmaceutical transport -- and recognizes knowledge gaps.
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    European Centre for Environment and Human Health
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_9
    Velocity RaptorGames & Apps - Honorable Mention: This dapper green dinosaur wearing a bright blue cape is in a hurry to save the world -- in fact, she moves at nearly the speed of light. Velocity Raptor is an attempt to "give people some intuition" about the physics of special relativity by letting them play with it themselves, game designer Andy Hall says.
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    TestTubeGames
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_10
    CyGaMEs Selene II: A Lunar Construction GaMEGames & Apps - Honorable Mention: In this online game geared to grade 5 - 12 students, players create their own moon with raw space materials, then pummel it with asteroids and flood it with lava. 
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    Wheeling Jesuit University / California State University
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_11
    UntangledGames & Apps - People's Choice: Inspired by a game that recruits online players to discover novel ways to fold proteins, Gayatri Mehta designed Untangled, a game in which users compete to make the most compact circuit layout on a grid. The game allows her to record millions of new moves and discover human strategies for circuit design that could be employed to develop smaller, more powerful, and longer-lasting electronic devices. 
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    University of North Texas
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_12
    Alya Red: A Computational HeartVideo - First Place and People's Choice: This image is an artistic rendering of Alya Red, a new computer model of the heart that marries modern medical imaging techniques with high-powered computing. Based on MRI data, each colored strand represents linked cardiac muscle cells that transmit electrical current and trigger a model human heartbeat.
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    Barcelona Supercomputing Center
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_13
    FertilizationVideo - Honorable Mention: The video "Fertilization" starts with 300 million sperm, following their perilous journey up the cervix and into the fallopian tube with unprecedented detail and continuity. By the time the last few dozen surviving sperm reach the egg, they're famished, troubled, and hopeful.
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    Nobles Green Nucleus Medical Media
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_14
    Observing the Coral SymbiomeVideo - Honorable Mention: No dyes or digital software produced the brilliant color of these corals--the glory is all their own. Fluorescent molecules, innate to the corals and to the red algae that live inside and nourish them, shine under different wavelengths of light emitted by a confocal microscope. 
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    Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology
  • Science_engineering_contest_2012_15
    Revealing Invisible Changes in The WorldVideo - Honorable Mention: This video shows a new method of magnifying subtle changes normally invisible to the eye. Using video as input, the team analyzes each pixel for slight variations in color over time--for example, rhythmic reddening in a man's face as blood pulses through his veins. Then they apply an algorithm that magnifies the variation, and extract the information they need. By amplifying the man's slight blush, for example, they were able to obtain his heartbeat. 
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    MIT / Quanta Research
  • Published
    15 Images

    Best science art of 2012

    The natural world is filled with gorgeous creatures, strange processes and mysterious structures hidden to the naked eye. The winners of the 2012 International Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge, announced Thursday, make that beauty visible.

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