model

scientific picture. A XNUMXD model system of human neurons in a dish. In green and purple: nerve cells expressing a protein that is defective in the ubiquitin system. As a result of this expression, the pathology that characterizes Alzheimer's patients is created - the formation of amyloid clusters (in red) outside the cells

Technion researchers have identified the mechanism leading to the formation of protein aggregates involved in the development of Alzheimer's disease

Toxic proteins accumulate in the brains of Alzheimer's patients. In the familial Alzheimer's patients, the accumulation mechanism is clear since there is a circumstantial relationship between the mutations and the identity of the defective proteins. In the random disease, on the other hand, the cause of the accumulation of proteins
innovation management. Illustration: Pixabay Gerd Altmann

A model for implementing innovation management methods in business companies

Innovation management and analytical diagnosis - a multidimensional model for creating organizational innovation in companies
The hexagonal structure of the lattice cells

Knitted - between space and time

Robert Koch

The enemy within: bacteria revisited

Right: Prof. Yoram Gruner Niv Pankovitz. Spatial analysis

The main suspect

Prof. Stephen Hawking in a plane that allows training in zero gravity conditions. Photo: NASA

The (elusive) theory of everything / Stephen Hawking and Leonard Malodino

Xiang-zhang. Photo credit Roy Kaltschmidt, Berkeley Lab Public Affairs

A strange twist in the plot - Mobius symmetry was found in supermaterials

A fresco from Pompeii from the first century (now in the National Museum of Naples) shows Larix pulling an arrow from the leg of Aeneas while Aeneas' son - Lalulus Ascanius - cries next to his father. On the left - Anas's mother - the goddess Venus

Another word about altruism

From the right: Yoel Rakah, Gideon Yekothiali, Yigal Ptolemy and Amos de Shalit, after a scientific conference in Basel, September 1949

nuclear shell path (of the atom)

Lung on a chip. Image courtesy of Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering

Development of a human lung on a chip