Difference between revisions of "Team:Cambridge-JIC/TestHome"
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<h2>Abstract</h2> | <h2>Abstract</h2> | ||
<p>Fluorescence microscopy has become a ubiquitous part of biological research and synthetic biology, but hardware can often be <span class="hl_1">large and prohibitively expensive</span>. This is particularly true for labs with small budgets, including those in the DIY Bio community and developing countries. Queuing systems imposed in labs for use of a few expensive microscopes can make research even more <span class="hl_1">laborious and time-consuming</span> than it needs to be. Furthermore, this makes it almost impossible to perform time-lapse imaging or imaging in environments such as in an incubator or in a fume hood.</p> | <p>Fluorescence microscopy has become a ubiquitous part of biological research and synthetic biology, but hardware can often be <span class="hl_1">large and prohibitively expensive</span>. This is particularly true for labs with small budgets, including those in the DIY Bio community and developing countries. Queuing systems imposed in labs for use of a few expensive microscopes can make research even more <span class="hl_1">laborious and time-consuming</span> than it needs to be. Furthermore, this makes it almost impossible to perform time-lapse imaging or imaging in environments such as in an incubator or in a fume hood.</p> | ||
− | <p>We aim to provide a <span class="hl_1">well documented, physically compact, easily modifiable and high quality fluorescence microscope</span> to address all of these problems. We are designing it in a modular fashion such that it can be used standalone and also be incorporated into larger frameworks, with various pluggable stages | + | <p>We aim to provide a <span class="hl_1">well documented, physically compact, easily modifiable and high quality fluorescence microscope</span> to address all of these problems. We are designing it in a modular fashion such that it can be used standalone and also be incorporated into larger frameworks, with various pluggable stages.</p> |
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<div style="padding-right: 50px; padding-left: 170px; padding-top: 60px; font-size: 20px;" class="padleft"> | <div style="padding-right: 50px; padding-left: 170px; padding-top: 60px; font-size: 20px;" class="padleft"> | ||
<p>The mechanics of the microscope will be 3D printable, and all other parts will be cheap and accessible. These introduce a novel method (developed by Dr Richard Bowman, Cambridge) for <span class="hl_2">precise positioning and control</span> which exploits the flexibility of the printed parts. The microscope will also utilise the developed-in-Cambridge Raspberry Pi board and camera module for image capture. Ultimately we are aiming for <span class="hl_2">4 micron resolution</span>, both in brightfield and fluorescence modes.</p> | <p>The mechanics of the microscope will be 3D printable, and all other parts will be cheap and accessible. These introduce a novel method (developed by Dr Richard Bowman, Cambridge) for <span class="hl_2">precise positioning and control</span> which exploits the flexibility of the printed parts. The microscope will also utilise the developed-in-Cambridge Raspberry Pi board and camera module for image capture. Ultimately we are aiming for <span class="hl_2">4 micron resolution</span>, both in brightfield and fluorescence modes.</p> | ||
− | <p>Furthermore, software used to control commercial microscopes is very much focused upon translating the physical experience of using a microscope into a computer. We aim to leverage the full computational potential of a digital microscope, <span class="hl_2">carefully considering functional UX design</span> to allow control (locally and also over a network) via a Google Maps-like interface and implementing <span class="hl_2">background image processing</span>, <span class="hl_2">annotation</span> and <span class="hl_2">stitching</span>, as well as allowing <span class="hl_2">fully autonomous operation</span>.</p> | + | <p>Furthermore, software used to control commercial microscopes is very much focused upon translating the physical experience of using a microscope into a computer. We aim to leverage the full computational potential of a digital microscope, <span class="hl_2">carefully considering functional UX design</span> to allow control (locally and also over a network) via a Google Maps-like interface and implementing <span class="hl_2">background image processing</span>, <span class="hl_2">annotation</span> and <span class="hl_2">stitching</span>, as well as allowing <span class="hl_2">fully autonomous operation</span>. As a proof of principle, we are also developing automated screening systems on our microscope architecture.</p> |
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Revision as of 23:39, 3 August 2015