User:Isis Trenchard
http://webspace.utexas.edu/ijt57/myspace/n7911781_36927679_5367.jpg |
Education
Research ExperienceUniversity of Texas
NSF REU in Cellular Engineering, Rice University, Summer 2007
Awards & Honors
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Research Interests
Random Thoughts
Sept 30 2007
Biological systems have an inherent "power" to them that if harnessed, I believe could lead to a revolution in how medicine is performed/administered. By power I mean...well if you imagine a biological system, say something like a bacteria... Within that tiny creature is the ability to sense and respond to all sorts of stimuli from the environment. It can regulate its metabolism, movement, life cycle; it can coordinate with other bacteria around it. Such a simple organism can perform very complex tasks. Now imagine something more complex, like yeast, or a single mammalian cell ...or something even more complex like a tissue or even an organ... Now imagine the incredible complexity of an entire being. The increase in the level of complexity is exponential. Think about the crazy amount of coordination and control each components must exert in order to create a functional system. I think if we could tap into and control just a fraction of this control network we could do some pretty cool stuff. I don't know what or how, but I know it would be really really awesome!