Biology is wonderful. It is attractive to research and read it at molecular level or basic level.
I remember the first time I fell in love. This may be a junior high school, we are in the class, the teacher teaches us about various things of the body such as the respiratory system, the cardiopulmonary system and how they are related and about things Give me
And I was sitting there, my chin was crazy, I just wanted to know how it is possible The body looks like a top oiled gear engine Function. When you think about it, the human body is a more efficient machine than any engine or device made by humans.
The most interesting thing about biology is that you always learn things you do not know. When the professor explains the role of CDK in the immune response to HIV and the cell cycle, you are always there. When you study physics and chemistry you can relate these things to something like "Oh, how this works", but biology is inside of you It is what is going on. This is very interesting for me. As I continue to move forward, I have an eternal desire to learn more.
Do not you want to find everything about it? How it works, what works and what keeps functioning. How do you cure the disease, or what is the cause or how does your body work? Or any living thing
Because there are many biologies that we do not understand, we can imagine many interesting questions. In another article that can not be traced, the authors point out that computer science may be a function of biology and mathematics. This is a bold and exciting proposition; bioinformatics (and hopefully continuing) leads researchers to new discoveries in the field of ingredients. Basically these are the four principles I have been building passion for this field. In the remainder of this article we will outline sources of information to help draw this conclusion and effective ways to gain a basic understanding of this area from the newly graduated computer science major.
When I majored in science and mathematics at a high school in India, I was interested in biology other than computers. The first aspect of biology that I am interested in is genetics. At that time, I did not know that interested in biology and computers will direct me to bioinformatics, that was a so-called technical term. Through the Internet, I learned about bioinformatics and its application. People very convinced about my future. I began to read the Human Genome Project, gene and genome. All of them started to fascinate me.
My biology was very complicated in the early 1990s when I became interested in developmental biology and changed the focus of research. This is a joke compared to the way we talk about genes. After I got a series of particularly good lectures at the California Institute of Technology, I remember asking biology professor, "Why are you ignoring all the problems?" I think this is the moment we discovered ourselves at the end of the 20th century. Indeed, among all the benefits genomics left for us, this humility may eventually prove to be its greatest contribution.