Line 441: | Line 441: | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
<table> | <table> | ||
− | The Lambert iGEM team was able to collaborate with the Emory iGEM team to openly discuss the ethics about Crispr Cas9 along with a class of other Emory students and professors. Through this discussion, they were able to gain knowledge about the different perspectives of genetic modification and to what extent people are willing to justify as ethical. Also, the Emory iGEM team was able to give us a tour of their labs to demonstrate their daily lab workings allowing both teams to grasp the overall purpose of each other’s projects. Lambert used this ethics conference as a springboard for their own investigations into ethics. As a result the team developed a simple flowchart for the synthetic biologists to use when considering the ethics of their own projects | + | The Lambert iGEM team was able to collaborate with the Emory iGEM team to openly discuss the ethics about Crispr Cas9 along with a class of other Emory students and professors. Through this discussion, they were able to gain knowledge about the different perspectives of genetic modification and to what extent people are willing to justify as ethical. Also, the Emory iGEM team was able to give us a tour of their labs to demonstrate their daily lab workings allowing both teams to grasp the overall purpose of each other’s projects. Lambert used this ethics conference as a springboard for their own investigations into ethics. As a result the team developed a simple flowchart for the synthetic biologists to use when considering the ethics of their own projects. Members of the team also attended a Business Ethics Experience held by the University of North Georgia. |
</table> | </table> | ||
<br><br><br><br> | <br><br><br><br> | ||
Line 453: | Line 453: | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
<table> | <table> | ||
− | + | The Chrome-Q prototypes designed by the team were 3-D printed by the Lambert High School Engineering department. A student, Sahil Jain, printed the first prototypes of the Chrome-Q. The engineering department 3-D printed the subsequent devices. The final Chrome-Q prototype was ordered from Shapeways. The engineering department printed the 3-D fuge designs obtained from the Prakash Lab from their Paperfuge project. In Sahil Jain modified one of the 3-D fuge designs to improve ease of usability. This final model was used to process cells for the final data collection. | |
</table> | </table> | ||
<br><br><br><br><br> | <br><br><br><br><br> |
Revision as of 18:29, 1 November 2017
Collaborations
Gibson Ridge Software
University of Georgia
TAS Taipei
Emory iGEM Team: Ethics Collaboration
Lambert High School: Engineering and MSA
iGEM Twitter Group
For more information, see our Silver Human Practices page.