diff --git a/docs/assignments/week10.md b/docs/assignments/week10.md index e9362aacbf4ec91b6c9613d9eeed161b2c821c83..4503e9dea256f8c18497968ab8bb8c6a49358be0 100644 --- a/docs/assignments/week10.md +++ b/docs/assignments/week10.md @@ -5,6 +5,7 @@ After browsing the possibilities of what I could build to enhance my biology lab, I landed on bioprinters. I was inspired by the work done in the [Boeke lab](https://med.nyu.edu/research/boeke-lab/) that made a printer that printed genetically-engineered yeast of different colours onto a petri dish to create art (as shown below). I figured that a bioprinter may also be able to do something similar to that, if not even more.  +*Image from [In Living Color](https://www.nyu.edu/about/news-publications/publications/arts-digest/issue-5/features/yeast-art.html#:~:text=This%20map%20functions%20as%20a,on%20them%20over%20several%20days.). I then began to do a bunch of research on bioprinters trying to find the cheapest one with the most well-explained instructions. I landed on the paper [Inexpensive DIY Bioprinting in a Secondary School Setting](https://journals.asm.org/doi/pdf/10.1128/jmbe.00124-22).