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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

Check out Boyle's biography or send a message to Cosmic Log via cosmiclog@msnbc.com.



Science you can see

Posted: Thursday, September 25, 2008 6:38 PM by Alan Boyle


J.D. Schiffman, C.L. Schauer / Drexel Univ.
Click for slide show: See a snapshot of squid
suckers and other images from the International Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge.

They say a picture is worth 1,000 words - but when it comes to science, one good picture might be worth 104 or 105 words, judging by this year's winners of the International Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge.

Check out our slide show to see a beautiful graphic analysis of the Bible’s interconnectedness, a “Microscopic Wonderland” starring Alice and the Mad Hatter, and a group portrait of the cutest little squid suckers you ever did see.

Fourteen examples of science you can see were selected for recognition by the contest's sponsors, the National Science Foundation and the journal Science. The winners were chosen from 181 entries that were sent in from 21 countries for the sixth annual challenge.

"Science and NSF instituted this international competition to reward scientists for using visualization techniques to demonstrate the beauty and the wonder of science," Monica Bradford, Science's executive editor, said in today's news release. "We appreciate their results and encourage others to participate."

Science, which is published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science, has established a Web portal linking to all sorts of information about the images and their creators. You have to be a Science subscriber to see all the details, but anyone can click through an awesome video-enhanced slide show as well as a podcast about the challenge. The National Science Foundation has a portal page and a slide show as well.

Here's the list of this year's honorees, even though the mere words don't do justice to the images themselves:

  • Photography: First place goes to Mario De Stefano, The Second University of Naples, for "The Glass Forest." Honorable mentions: Andrew Davidhazy, Rochester Institute of Technology, for "String Vibrations." Jessica D. Schiffman and Caroline L. Schauer, Drexel University, for "Squid Suckers: The Little Monsters That Feed the Beast." Ye Jin Eun and Douglas B. Weibel, University of Wisconsin-Madison, for "Polymazing."

  • Illustration: First place goes to Linda Nye and the Exploratorium Visualization Laboratory, The Exploratorium, for "Zoom Into the Human Bloodstream." (Check out this big-screen version.) Honorable mentions: Chris Harrison, Carnegie Mellon University, and Christoph Römhild, North Elbian Evangelical Lutheran Church, for "Visualizing the Bible." Donald Bliss and Sriram Subramaniam, National Library of Medicine, NIH, for "3-D Imaging of Mammalian Cells with Ion-Abrasion Scanning Electron Microscopy."

  • Informational graphics: First place goes to Colleen Champ and Dennis Kunkel, Concise Image Studios, for "Mad Hatter's Tea" from "Alice's Adventures in a Microscopic Wonderland." (Check out the big-screen version.) Honorable mention: Andrew Dopheide and Gillian Lewis, University of Auckland, for "Stream Micro-Ecology: Life in a Biofilm." (Big-screen version here.)

  • Interactive media: First place goes to Jeremy Friedberg and Tommy Sors, Spongelab Interactive, for "Genomics Digital Lab: Plant Cells." Honorable mention: Janet Iwasa, Massachusetts General Hospital, for "Exploring Life's Origins."

  • Non-interactive media: Honorable mentions go to three entries: Travis Vermilye and Kenneth Eward for "A Window Into Life." Mirjam Kaplow and Katharina Strohmeier, Fraunhofer FIRST, for "Smarter Than the Worm." Etsuko Uno and Drew Berry, the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, for "Fighting Infection by Clonal Selection."

To get at least 14,000 words' worth, don't miss the slide show. You can also review winning images from 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007.

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Comments

This is the kind of science I want to bring into the classroom.   The texts and worksheets that students are saddled with turn them off.

When I taught Honors Biology, in California, I had fully integrated Internet, DVD, Video, interactive discecting, close action camera,  the works.
And my students responded by scoring very high on the Now defunct Golden State Biology Exam.
The other teacher did not use the technology.  My students scored an average of 25% Honors.  Her class? 10% scored honors.
I am substituting in small school districts in Missouri now.  They have overheads and textbooks for every child, and they are proud of that.....

I have attempted to access the slide show three times. I have not been able to connect, and I would very much be able to view it.  Anything you can do?
It would be much appreciated.

[ALAN ADDS: Our slideshows do rely on Javascript and Flash, so if there are disabled features or incompatibility, that may be causing the problem. Also, the way I've linked the slideshow from the log seeks to launch a new browser window, so if you have a pop-up blocker, that may be the problem. You could try the link from this version of the story and see if it works any better for you:]

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26894558/

[But if you just can't get the msnbc slideshow to work, you should still be able to look at the imagery using the slideshows from Science and NSF. I've linked to them from the article up above, but for your convenience, here are the links again:]

http://www.sciencemag.org/vis2008/show/

http://www.nsf.gov/news/special_reports/scivis/

[If you use the NSF.gov link, be sure to click on the 2008 entries once you "enter" the application. Science's slideshow offers somewhat larger versions of the images. Good luck, and I'm sorry to hear it's been a bit frustrating. Hope the payoff will be worth the effort.]

Vegan Lampreys...
Bible, what is this impediment to science doing anywhere in the same breath.
I wanted to let your readers know that the "Zoom into the Human Bloodstream" illustration (as well as a version with captions) are available free for non-commercial use with attribution at www.nisenet.org/viz_lab.  This illustration is part of a series designed for the Nanoscale Informal Science Education Network to advance public understanding of nanoscale science.

I agree that the slide show does not work. My computer has just about everything and the only viewable image is the squid sucker. There is no continuation button for the next image, etc.

[ALAN ADDS: Wow, this is not so good. It works for me in IE as well as Firefox. Another potential URL to try is this one:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26891829/
displaymode/1107/s/2/framenumber/1/

[There should be a left and a right arrow as well as a series of numbers along the bottom of the picture, and you should also be able to advance from frame to frame by clicking right on the picture you're looking at. If you're desperate to get msnbc.com slideshows to work, you could try checking to see if you have the latest version of Flash. Otherwise, I would try the Science/AAAS version of the slideshow I've mentioned up above. There's some cool video with that one. In the meantime, I'll let the tech folks know that some people have had a problem.]

Hi Alan,
I'm so glad that I get the slide show because I only have a MSN WEBTV. Rarely would I get a video. Just love your "Show".  Thanks,
Lilo, Las Vegas, NV
I guess my screen is too small, as I cannot view the text with the horizontally situated pictures... cliking the picture advances the slideshow for me... no arrows to be seen.....

all are amazing and beautiful, tho,  and I will go to the other sites given to try again...
I loved the pictures but would also like to display them to pique the interest of my visual learners during their "hall time." Do you have posters of these available?

[ALAN ADDS: You'll probably want to contact the folks who created the works to find out about that. For example, bigger versions of the Bloodstream "Zoom" view (and a zoom-in on a butterfly's wing) are being made available through the Nanoscale Informal Science Education, as mentioned above.]
In response to Jessica Long in Albany, NY. Please refer to Genesis 1:27-31.  If you don't have a Bible, then you can google it.
I would like to see a comparison done to the Bible picture based on the koran.

I have a feeling it will not have the symmetry and beauty.
But who knows?

WOW!! the BIBLE and Science!  How cool!
From the images here one would get the impression that science only occurs on the microscopic level. I guess all those astrophysicists and astronomers out there aren't really "scientists" then?
I had to put my browser on full screen to see the slide show. The next button didn's show up on the reduced screen.
hi i just ordered a poster of the Mad Hatters Tea here...
www.microscopicwonderland.com

such a unique gift!
Anyway to post the #5 Bible graph to facebook?


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