Andrew Pelling: This scientist makes ears out of apples
Andrew Pelling: Pamišęs mokslininkas daro ausis iš obuolio
Andrew Pelling's unconventional and creative scientific process is founded on play. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
for old electronics,
elektronikos prietaisų.
dirbtuves ir nulaužti.
turn things on and off.
galima įjungti ir išjungti.
into an awesome robot.
paversti nuostabiu robotu.
a lot of stuff out of garbage,
have even been kind of useful.
to amuse myself.
so I just made it part of my day job.
todėl tai tapo mano darbo dalis.
biologijos tyrimų laboratorijai,
biological research lab,
and exploration above all else.
žingeidumą ir tyrinėjimą.
on any particular problem,
konkrečiu dalyku
any particular disease.
konkrečios problemos.
kur žmonės gali ateiti
and find answers.
klausimų – gauti atsakymus.
to build the equipment they need
pasigaminti reikiamą įrangą
from around the world
ir mokslininkai iš viso pasaulio
we value unconventional ideas,
vertiname neįprastas idėjas,
išbandome ir patvirtiname
I was taking it apart,
biologija kaip su aparatūra?
in some new and creative way?
tell me what fruit this is?
That's right -- it's an apple.
teisingai – tai obuolys.
than most apples.
we grew human cells into it.
kad jame yra žmogaus ląstelių.
Macintosh apple,
after removing all the apple cells
their shape and texture.
jų formą ir tekstūrą.
the apple cells used to be.
that you can see in blue.
melsvas žinduolio ląsteles.
these guys start multiplying
of how our own tissues are organized.
these scaffolds into the body,
and a blood supply
when people started asking me,
body parts out of apples?"
galima gaminti kūno dalis?“
to the right place."
of wood carving for a living.
literally carve some ears
in the ear-manufacturing business.
ne ausų gaminimo verslas.
on this for decades.
really expensive and problematic,
labai brangūs ir probleminiai,
from proprietary products,
iš patentuotų produktų,
o jis kainuoja centus.
to make these things.
can be built from garbage,
pasigaminti iš šiukšlių,
only requires soap and water.
the instructions online as open source.
kaip atvirą šaltinį.
a mission-driven company,
to make it easier
and a soldering iron
about is if one day,
and augment our own bodies
pataisyti ir priauginti kūną
your pee smell funny.
pasikeičia šlapimo kvapas.
and I was noticing
the stalks of these asparagus,
are all these tiny little vessels.
forms these structures.
celiuliozė formuoja jų struktūrą.
of our nerves and spinal cord.
smegenų struktūrą ir išdėstymą.
down these channels?
ir neuronus šiuose kanaluose?
to form new connections
formuoti naujus ryšius
and severed nerves.
working on this.
vieninteliai prie to dirbantys.
really promising pilot data.
duomenys daug žada.
that's all around me on this stage
my lab is involved in
dirba mano laboratorija,
of me playing with your garbage.
jūsų šiukšlėmis padarinys.
of my scientific practice.
mano mokslinio darbo dalis.
to be unconventional and to be creative
obuolines žmonių ausis.
are looking at some old,
piece-of-crap technology,
to get in touch with me,
kaip nors su manimi susisiekti
ką galima iš to pagaminti.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Andrew Pelling - BiohackerAndrew Pelling's unconventional and creative scientific process is founded on play.
Why you should listen
Scientist, professor, entrepreneur and TED Fellow Andrew Pelling has built a career on unapologetic curiosity, creativity and serendipity. He is a professor and Canada Research Chair at the University of Ottawa, where he founded and directs a curiosity-driven research lab that brings together artists, scientists, social scientists and engineers. The lab uses low-cost, open source materials and methods to explore speculative living technologies of the future. He has, for instance, created human body parts made from plants and grown living skins on LEGOs -- innovations with the potential to replace prohibitively expensive commercial biomaterials.
Pelling is also the co-founder and CTO of Spiderwort Inc., a mission driven company developing open source platforms to enable the widespread and global adoption of biological research in all environments and economic contexts. Most recently, he founded pHacktory, a street-level research lab in Ottawa that amplifies community ideas through a potent mixture of craft, serendipity and curiosity.
Pelling's work has been in the international media spotlight for many years, with recognition in outlets such as Wired, Huffington Post, NPR, Scientific American, Popular Science, BBC, Der Spiegel, Deutsche Welle and others, as well as numerous highlights in the Canadian media and Scientific media. He was named a TED Fellow in 2016.
Andrew Pelling | Speaker | TED.com