If you go back to the first single-cell form of life, it clearly possessed the capacity to receive, to utilize, to store, to transform, and to transmit information.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
That's the new way - with computers, computers, computers. That's the way we can have the cell survive and get some new information in high resolution. We started about five years ago and, today, I think we have reached the target.
The knowledge we have of communication among cells does not permit my giving you a sophisticated understanding.
I was driven completely by a desire to understand how cells worked.
A living cell requires energy not only for all its functions, but also for the maintenance of its structure.
Genes that underlie the capacity to receive, use and transmit information are the evolving properties.
The cells of an organism are nodes in a richly interwoven communications network, transmitting and receiving, coding and decoding. Evolution itself embodies an ongoing exchange of information between organism and environment.
There are many cells you could look at forever in 3D.
In my experience of living, for a time, in the underbelly of society, I spent a lot of time in various holding cells.
The cell is a city of production centres, each part working away like mad, and it's co-ordinated. Six trillion cells in a body - you can't help but be moved.
In basic research, the use of the electron microscope has revealed to us the complex universe of the cell, the basic unit of life.
No opposing quotes found.