Stanford Radio
E127 | Markus Covert: How to build a computer model of a cell
- Autor: Vários
- Narrador: Vários
- Editor: Podcast
- Duración: 0:27:53
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Sinopsis
The Future of Everything with Russ Altman: E127 | Markus Covert: How to build a computer model of a cell A bioengineer sets out to create a computer simulation of a single living cell and comes to grips with the remarkable complexity that is life. When Stanford bioengineer Markus Covert first decided to create a computer model able to simulate the behavior of a single cell, he was held back by more than an incomplete understanding of how a cell functions, but also by a lack of computer power. His early models would take more than 10 hours to churn through a single simulation and that was when using a supercomputer capable of billions of calculations per second. Nevertheless, in his quest toward what had been deemed "a grand challenge of the 21st century," Covert pressed on and eventually published a paper announcing his success in building a model of just one microbe: E. coli, a popular subject in biological research. The model would allow researchers to run experiments not on living bacteria in a lab, but