Biohacking or DIY Bio These are notes from the Public Lab Barnraising in New Orleans (4-6 Oct 20...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
1 CURRENT | TedF |
October 06, 2013 22:06
| about 11 years ago
Biohacking or DIY Bio These are notes from the Public Lab Barnraising in New Orleans (4-6 Oct 2013). A group of Public Lab members discussed the following: 1. What do we understand to be Biohacking? 2. How does Biohacking fit into the Public Lab mission statement? 3. What are some Biohacking activities Public Lab members could engage with or build up? The following results or conclusions can be reported: 1. What do we understand to be Biohacking? These are the raw statements of the participants; Biohacking is/means: "Using a biological system for my own purpose, where that purpose is different from its natural or traditional use" - "Modifying bioprocesses/organisms" - "Getting a (bio) body to do something else" - "Rearranging the genetic code" - "Bring DIY tools into biolabs" - "Mimicking natural systems" - "Hacking biology and making experiments cheaper and more accessible" - "Building specific sensors or equipment to measure biological data (e.g. galvanic skin responses)" The conclusion was that Biohacking might be best thought of as involving the use of a biological system to accomplish some goal; using tech equipment to measure biological data is perhaps not Biohacking, but certainly useful as e.g. DIY medical technology etc. 2. How does Biohacking fit into the Public Lab mission statement? The mission statement states amongst others that the mission is to "generate knowledge and share data about environmental health". Therefore, we should try to find applications of Biohacking that help us understand the environment, monitor the environment or improve the environment (e.g. bioremediation). 3. What are some Biohacking activities Public Lab members could engage with or build up? We discussed several options for activities (in order of complexity):
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0 | TedF |
October 06, 2013 21:43
| about 11 years ago
Biohacking or DIY Bio These are notes from the Public Lab Barnraising in New Orleans (4-6 Oct 2013). A group of Public Lab members discussed the following: 1. What do we understand to be Biohacking? 2. How does Biohacking fit into the Public Lab mission statement? 3. What are some Biohacking activities Public Lab members could engage with or build up? The following results or conclusions can be reported: 1. What do we understand to be Biohacking? These are the raw statements of the participants; Biohacking is/means: "Using a biological system for my own purpose, where that purpose is different from its natural or traditional use" - "Modifying bioprocesses/organisms" - "Getting a (bio) body to do something else" - "Rearranging the genetic code" - "Bring DIY tools into biolabs" - "Mimicking natural systems" - "Hacking biology and making experiments cheaper and more accessible" - "Building specific sensors or equipment to measure biological data (e.g. galvanic skin responses)" The conclusion was that Biohacking might be best thought of as involving the use of a biological system to accomplish some goal; using tech equipment to measure biological data is perhaps not Biohacking, but certainly useful as e.g. DIY medical technology etc. 2. How does Biohacking fit into the Public Lab mission statement? The mission statement states amongst others that the mission is to "generate knowledge and share data about environmental health". Therefore, we should try to find applications of Biohacking that help us understand the environment, monitor the environment or improve the environment (e.g. bioremediation). 3. What are some Biohacking activities Public Lab members could engage with or build up? We discussed several options for activities (in order of complexity):
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