Foundations of Biological Science I (BioSci 150)
C
Cells. Structure and Function
It is the cell that is alive! Therefore. study cells to study life.
Foundations of Biological Science I (BioSci 150)
C
A typical bacterium
Prokaryotes lack organel
Books, URLs, and Software for Teaching Mathematical Biology to Undergraduates
Lower Division Textbooks
Adler, F., Modeling the Dynamics of Life, 2nd Ed. (Brooks/Coles, 1998) Allman, E. & Rhodes, J., Mathematical Models in Biology: An Introduction (Ca
LEARNING MODULE 3: PROMOTERS, REPORTER GENES AND METHODS FOR ANALYZING TRANSGENE EXPRESSION IN PLANT HOSTS
LEARNING OBJECTIVES (next 2 lectures): Understand the major reporter gene systems used in plant transformation work and their specific advanta
Initial Education Program Course and Field Experience Alignment with Praxis II Content Table x.xx Course and Field Experience Alignment with Praxis II Content: Biology Content Knowledge Subject Area:
I. Basic Principles of Science (History and Natura
BISC 220L
Albert Herrera, lecturer William McClure, lecturer Pamela Lum, lab director Teaching assistants Supplemental Instruction leaders
Mechanics of the course
Labs are important, and very useful We will incorporate several changes
Prelec
BISC 220L
Albert Herrera, lecturer William McClure, lecturer Pamela Lum, lab director Teaching assistants Supplemental Instruction leaders
Mechanics of the course
Labs are important, and very useful We will incorporate several changes
Prelec
Ronald Booker, BioNB 222 Spring 2008
Lecture 35
Learning and Memory: The acquisition of a behavior through experience
Two General categories of learning
1. Nonassociative Learning
Habituation Sensitization
2. Associative Learning
Classical Con
UNSW ANAT2341 Lecture 21 Bone Development
October 17, 2005
UNSW Copyright Notice ANAT2341 - Lecture 21
COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969 WARNING This material has been copied and communicated to you by or on behalf of the Univers
ANAM1006 Lecture 9 - Bone Development
Dr Carol Lazer Online Lecture/Lab Slides modified from Dr Mark Hill (2002)
UNSW Copyright Notice
COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969 WARNING This material has been copied and communicated to you
Embryology Lecture Overview
Vertebrate Development 2310- Hearing
Dr Mark Hill (room G20)
Development of Hearing Larson- chapter 12 p352-360 Structures
outer, middle inner
Functions Origins Development Regulatory genes (mainly from KO studies) Abno
UNSW ANAT2341 Lecture 22 Hearing/Balance Development
Friday, October 21, 2005
ANAT2341 - Embryology Early and Systemic Development Lecture 22
School of Medical Sciences The University of New South Wales
UNSW Copyright Notice
COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRA
Structure of the human genome
Genome contains 3000 megabasepairs (3x109 bp) of DNA Estimated 65,000-80,000 genes- turns out to be more like 30,000-40,000! DNA is contained on 24 distinct chromosomes (22 autosomes, X and Y) Chromosome 1 has the mo
ANAT2341 - Embryology Early and Systemic Development Lecture 22
School of Medical Sciences The University of New South Wales
Dr Mark Hill
Cell Biology Laboratory Room G20 Wallace Wurth Building Email: m.hill@unsw.edu.au
Ear Development Dr Mark Hil
BioG 101 Cornell University
Oct. 31, 2006
EXAM 2 (2006)
MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one best answer from among those given. Mark the answer on the op-scan sheet provided. Keep a record of each of your answers on these pages so that you can correct
Some things to consider
What if: A child dies and one parent wants to clone it and the other doesn't. Who owns the rights to the dead person's DNA? People don't want to be cloned after they die? It becomes acceptable to clone a person once. Or 10