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Wikipedia

Do-it-yourself biology

Do-it-yourself biology (DIY biology, DIY bio) is a growing biotechnological social movement in which individuals, communities, and small organizations study biology and life science using the same methods as traditional research institutions. DIY biology is primarily undertaken by individuals with limited research training from academia or corporations, who then mentor and oversee other DIY biologists with little or no formal training.[citation needed] This may be done as a hobby, as a not-for-profit endeavour for community learning and open-science innovation, or for profit, to start a business.

Other terms are also associated with the do-it-yourself biology community. The terms biohacking and wetware hacking emphasize the connection to hacker culture and the hacker ethic.[1] The term hacker is used in the original sense of finding new and clever ways to do things. The term biohacking is also used by the grinder body modification community, which is considered related but distinct from the do-it-yourself biology movement.[2] The term biopunk emphasizes the techno-progressive, political, and artistic elements of the movement.

History

 
WHABBH poster designed by the Center for Genomic Gastronomy (2010)

The term "biohacking" as well as the concept of do-it-yourself biology has been known as early as 1988.[3][4][5]

Biohacking entered the San Francisco programmer and maker communities as early as 2005, through simple demonstrations of basic experiments. As DIYbio experiments became the focus of SuperHappyDevHouse hackers, the hobby gained additional momentum.

In 2005 Rob Carlson wrote in an article in Wired: "The era of garage biology is upon us. Want to participate? Take a moment to buy yourself a lab on eBay."[6] He then set up a garage lab the same year, working on a project he had previously worked at the Molecular Sciences Institute in Berkeley, California.[7]

In 2008, the DIYbio organization was founded by Jason Bobe and Mackenzie Cowell and its first meeting held.[8]

In 2010, Genspace opened the first community biology lab,[9] Ten months later it was followed by BioCurious,[10] and Victoria Makerspace. Many other labs and organizations followed, including but not limited to Counter Culture Labs in Oakland, CA, Baltimore Underground Science Space in Baltimore, MD, TheLab in Los Angeles, CA and Denver Biolabs in Denver, CO.

It has been estimated that in 2014 there have been 50 DIY biology labs around the world.[11]: 119 

In 2016, the first conference to focus specifically on biohacking was announced to take place in September in Oakland, CA.[12]

Aspects

The DIYbio movement seeks to revise the notion that one must be an academic with an advanced degree to make any significant contribution to the biology community. It allows large numbers of small organizations and individuals to participate in research and development, with spreading knowledge a higher priority than turning profits.[13] In recent years, there are various DIY ways to live healthy and many of them also focuses on different simple ways to biohack mind,[14] body, metabolism[15][better source needed][16][17] and sleep.[18]

The motivations for DIY biology include (but aren't limited to) lowered costs, entertainment, medicine, biohacking, life extension, and education. Recent work combining open-source hardware of microcontrollers like the Arduino and RepRap 3-D printers, very low-cost scientific instruments have been developed.[19]

Community laboratory space

Many organizations maintain a laboratory akin to a wet-lab makerspace, providing equipment and supplies for members. Many organizations also run classes and provide training. For a fee (usually between $50 and $100), members can join some spaces and do experiments on their own.[20][21][22]

Open source equipment

The DIY biology movement attempts to make available the tools and resources necessary for anyone, including non-professionals, to conduct biological engineering. One of the first pieces of open source laboratory equipment developed was the Dremelfuge by Irish biohacker Cathal Garvey, which uses a 3D printed tube holder attached to a Dremel rotary tool to spin tubes at high speeds, replacing often expensive centrifuges.[23] Many other devices like PCR machines have been recreated extensively.[24][25][26] In recent times, more complex devices have been created such as the OpenDrop digital microfluidics platform[27] and the DIY NanoDrop[28] both developed by GaudiLabs. Opentrons makes open-source, affordable lab robots, and got its start as a DIY biology collaboration at Genspace.[29] Incuvers makes telemetric chambers for cellular research that are affordable and allow for complete customizability of their environments. OpenCell, a London based biotech lab provider hosts regular biohackathons to help encourage more opensource development. [30]

Advocacy

Most advocacy in biohacking is about the safety, accessibility and future legality of experimentation. Todd Kuiken of the Woodrow Wilson Center proposes that through safety and self-governance, DIY biologists won't be in need of regulation.[31] Josiah Zayner has proposed that safety is inherent in biohacking and that accessibility should be the foremost concern as there is large underrepresentation of social and ethnic minorities in biohacking.[32]

Research topics

Many biohacking projects revolve around the modification of life and molecular and genetic engineering.[33]

Bioinformatics

Bioinformatics is another popular target for do-it-yourself biology research. As in other fields, many programming languages can be used in DIY biology, but most of the languages that are used are those with large bioinformatics libraries.

Examples include BioPerl or BioPython, which use the languages Perl and Python, respectively.

Genetic engineering

Genetic Engineers are a subculture of biohackers as one of the most accessible forms of biohacking is through engineering microorganisms or plants. Experiments can range from using plasmids to fluorescent bacteria, controlling gene expression using light in bacteria,[34] even using CRISPR to engineer the genome of bacteria or yeast.[35]

Medicine

Restricted access to medical care and medicine has pushed biohackers to start experimenting in medically related fields. The Open Insulin project aims to make the recombinant protein insulin more accessible by creating an open source protocol for expression and purification.[36] Other experiments that have involved medical treatments include a whole body microbiome transplant[37] and the creation of open source artificial pancreases[38] for diabetics, such as OpenAPS, Loop[39] and AndroidAPS.[40]

Implants

Grinders are a subculture of biohackers that focus on implanting technology[41] or introducing chemicals[42] into the body to enhance or change their bodies' functionality.

Some biohackers can now sense which direction they face using a magnetic implant that vibrates against the skin.[43]

Art

In 2000, controversial and self-described "transgenic artist" Eduardo Kac appropriated standard laboratory work by biotechnology and genetics researchers in order to both utilize and critique such scientific techniques. In the only putative work of transgenic art by Kac, the artist claimed to have collaborated with a French laboratory (belonging to the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique) to procure a green-fluorescent rabbit: a rabbit implanted with a green fluorescent protein gene from a type of jellyfish [Aequorea victoria] in order for the rabbit to fluoresce green under ultraviolet light. The claimed work came to be known as the "GFP bunny", and which Kac called Alba. This claim by Kac has been disputed by the scientists at the lab who noted that they had performed exactly the same experiment (i.e., the insertion of the jellyfish GFP protein-coding gene) on numerous other animals (cats, dogs, etc.) previously and did not create Alba (known to the researchers only as "Rabbit Number 5256") under the direction of Kac. The laboratory consequently kept possession of the transgenic rabbit which it had created and funded and the "transgenic art" was never exhibited at the Digital Avignon festival [2000] as intended. Kac—claiming that his rabbit was the first GFP bunny created in the name of Art—used this dispute to popularize the issue as one of disguised censorship by launching a "Free Alba" campaign. A doctored photo of the artist holding a day-glow-green tinted rabbit appears on his website.[44] The members of the Critical Art Ensemble have written books and staged multimedia performance interventions around this issue, including The Flesh Machine (focusing on in vitro fertilisation, surveillance of the body, and liberal eugenics) and Cult of the New Eve (In order to analyze how, in their words, "Science is the institution of authority regarding the production of knowledge, and tends to replace this particular social function of conventional Christianity in the west").[45]

Heather Dewey-Hagborg is an information artist and biohacker who uses genomic DNA left behind by people as a starting point for creating lifelike, computer-generated, 3-D portraits.[46][47]

Criticism and concerns

Biohacking experiences many of the same criticisms as synthetic biology and genetic engineering already receive, plus other concerns relating to the distributed and non-institutional nature of the work, involving potential hazards with lack of oversight by professionals or governments. Concerns about biohackers creating pathogens in unmonitored garage laboratories led the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to begin sending its representatives to DIYbio conferences in 2009.[7] The arrest and prosecution of some members for their work with harmless microbes, such as artivist Steve Kurtz, has been denounced as political repression by critics who argue the U.S. government has used post-9/11 anti-terrorism powers to intimidate artists and others who use their art to criticize society.[48]

Existing regulations are not specific to this field, so that the possibility of pathogenic organisms being created and released unintentionally or intentionally by biohackers has become a matter of concern, for example, in the spirit of the re-creation of the 1917 flu virus by Armed Forces Institute of Pathology researchers in 2005.[49] In the US the FBI Weapons of Mass Destruction Directorate has worked with the American Association for the Advancement of Science's National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity to convene a series of meetings to discuss biosecurity, which have included discussions of amateur biologists and ways to manage the risks to society it poses.[50][51]: 8.16  At the National Institutes of Health, National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity[52] leads efforts to educate the public on "dual use research of concern", for example with websites like "Science Safety Security".[53] In 2011, DIYbio organized conferences to attempt to create codes of ethics for biohackers.[54]

Pat Mooney, executive director of ETC Group, is a critic of biohacking who argues that—using a laptop computer, published gene sequence information, and mail-order synthetic DNA—just about anyone has the potential to construct genes or entire genomes from scratch (including those of the lethal pathogens) in the near-future.[citation needed] A 2007 ETC Group report warns that the danger of this development is not just bio-terror, but "bio-error".[55]

While no DIYbio project to date has involved harmful agents, the fear remains in the minds of both regulators and laypersons. However, it is often pointed out that DIYbio is at too early a stage to consider such advanced projects feasible, as few successful transformative genetics projects have been undertaken yet. It is also worth noting that, while an individual could conceivably do harm with sufficient skill and intent, there exist biology labs throughout the world with greater access to the technology, skill and funding to accomplish a bioweapons project.[citation needed]

While detractors argue that do-it-yourself biologists need some sort of supervision, enthusiasts argue that uniform supervision is impossible and the best way to prevent accidents or malevolence is to encourage a culture of transparency, where, in essence, do-it-yourself biologists would be peer reviewed by other biohackers.[56] Enthusiasts argue that fear of potential hazards should be met with increased research and education rather than closing the door on the profound positive impacts that distributed biological technology will have on human health, the environment, and the standard of living around the world.[57] Due to the lack of precedent regarding such a business model, the DIYbio founders see this as an opportunity to be innovators in regulatory and safety policy.[8]

Groups and organizations

See also

References

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External links

  • DIYbio.org, a community for DIY biology beginners

yourself, biology, diybio, redirects, here, organization, diybio, organization, this, article, about, real, life, citizen, science, advocacy, movement, dystopian, cyberpunk, science, fiction, subgenre, biopunk, biology, growing, biotechnological, social, movem. DIYbio redirects here For the organization see DIYbio organization This article is about real life citizen science and advocacy movement For dystopian cyberpunk and science fiction subgenre see Biopunk Do it yourself biology DIY biology DIY bio is a growing biotechnological social movement in which individuals communities and small organizations study biology and life science using the same methods as traditional research institutions DIY biology is primarily undertaken by individuals with limited research training from academia or corporations who then mentor and oversee other DIY biologists with little or no formal training citation needed This may be done as a hobby as a not for profit endeavour for community learning and open science innovation or for profit to start a business Other terms are also associated with the do it yourself biology community The terms biohacking and wetware hacking emphasize the connection to hacker culture and the hacker ethic 1 The term hacker is used in the original sense of finding new and clever ways to do things The term biohacking is also used by the grinder body modification community which is considered related but distinct from the do it yourself biology movement 2 The term biopunk emphasizes the techno progressive political and artistic elements of the movement Contents 1 History 2 Aspects 2 1 Community laboratory space 2 2 Open source equipment 2 3 Advocacy 3 Research topics 3 1 Bioinformatics 3 2 Genetic engineering 3 3 Medicine 3 4 Implants 3 5 Art 4 Criticism and concerns 5 Groups and organizations 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory Edit WHABBH poster designed by the Center for Genomic Gastronomy 2010 The term biohacking as well as the concept of do it yourself biology has been known as early as 1988 3 4 5 Biohacking entered the San Francisco programmer and maker communities as early as 2005 through simple demonstrations of basic experiments As DIYbio experiments became the focus of SuperHappyDevHouse hackers the hobby gained additional momentum In 2005 Rob Carlson wrote in an article in Wired The era of garage biology is upon us Want to participate Take a moment to buy yourself a lab on eBay 6 He then set up a garage lab the same year working on a project he had previously worked at the Molecular Sciences Institute in Berkeley California 7 In 2008 the DIYbio organization was founded by Jason Bobe and Mackenzie Cowell and its first meeting held 8 In 2010 Genspace opened the first community biology lab 9 Ten months later it was followed by BioCurious 10 and Victoria Makerspace Many other labs and organizations followed including but not limited to Counter Culture Labs in Oakland CA Baltimore Underground Science Space in Baltimore MD TheLab in Los Angeles CA and Denver Biolabs in Denver CO It has been estimated that in 2014 there have been 50 DIY biology labs around the world 11 119 In 2016 the first conference to focus specifically on biohacking was announced to take place in September in Oakland CA 12 Aspects EditThe DIYbio movement seeks to revise the notion that one must be an academic with an advanced degree to make any significant contribution to the biology community It allows large numbers of small organizations and individuals to participate in research and development with spreading knowledge a higher priority than turning profits 13 In recent years there are various DIY ways to live healthy and many of them also focuses on different simple ways to biohack mind 14 body metabolism 15 better source needed 16 17 and sleep 18 The motivations for DIY biology include but aren t limited to lowered costs entertainment medicine biohacking life extension and education Recent work combining open source hardware of microcontrollers like the Arduino and RepRap 3 D printers very low cost scientific instruments have been developed 19 Community laboratory space Edit Many organizations maintain a laboratory akin to a wet lab makerspace providing equipment and supplies for members Many organizations also run classes and provide training For a fee usually between 50 and 100 members can join some spaces and do experiments on their own 20 21 22 Open source equipment Edit The DIY biology movement attempts to make available the tools and resources necessary for anyone including non professionals to conduct biological engineering One of the first pieces of open source laboratory equipment developed was the Dremelfuge by Irish biohacker Cathal Garvey which uses a 3D printed tube holder attached to a Dremel rotary tool to spin tubes at high speeds replacing often expensive centrifuges 23 Many other devices like PCR machines have been recreated extensively 24 25 26 In recent times more complex devices have been created such as the OpenDrop digital microfluidics platform 27 and the DIY NanoDrop 28 both developed by GaudiLabs Opentrons makes open source affordable lab robots and got its start as a DIY biology collaboration at Genspace 29 Incuvers makes telemetric chambers for cellular research that are affordable and allow for complete customizability of their environments OpenCell a London based biotech lab provider hosts regular biohackathons to help encourage more opensource development 30 Advocacy Edit Most advocacy in biohacking is about the safety accessibility and future legality of experimentation Todd Kuiken of the Woodrow Wilson Center proposes that through safety and self governance DIY biologists won t be in need of regulation 31 Josiah Zayner has proposed that safety is inherent in biohacking and that accessibility should be the foremost concern as there is large underrepresentation of social and ethnic minorities in biohacking 32 Research topics EditMany biohacking projects revolve around the modification of life and molecular and genetic engineering 33 Bioinformatics Edit Bioinformatics is another popular target for do it yourself biology research As in other fields many programming languages can be used in DIY biology but most of the languages that are used are those with large bioinformatics libraries Examples include BioPerl or BioPython which use the languages Perl and Python respectively Genetic engineering Edit Genetic Engineers are a subculture of biohackers as one of the most accessible forms of biohacking is through engineering microorganisms or plants Experiments can range from using plasmids to fluorescent bacteria controlling gene expression using light in bacteria 34 even using CRISPR to engineer the genome of bacteria or yeast 35 Medicine Edit Restricted access to medical care and medicine has pushed biohackers to start experimenting in medically related fields The Open Insulin project aims to make the recombinant protein insulin more accessible by creating an open source protocol for expression and purification 36 Other experiments that have involved medical treatments include a whole body microbiome transplant 37 and the creation of open source artificial pancreases 38 for diabetics such as OpenAPS Loop 39 and AndroidAPS 40 Implants Edit Grinders are a subculture of biohackers that focus on implanting technology 41 or introducing chemicals 42 into the body to enhance or change their bodies functionality Some biohackers can now sense which direction they face using a magnetic implant that vibrates against the skin 43 Art Edit In 2000 controversial and self described transgenic artist Eduardo Kac appropriated standard laboratory work by biotechnology and genetics researchers in order to both utilize and critique such scientific techniques In the only putative work of transgenic art by Kac the artist claimed to have collaborated with a French laboratory belonging to the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique to procure a green fluorescent rabbit a rabbit implanted with a green fluorescent protein gene from a type of jellyfish Aequorea victoria in order for the rabbit to fluoresce green under ultraviolet light The claimed work came to be known as the GFP bunny and which Kac called Alba This claim by Kac has been disputed by the scientists at the lab who noted that they had performed exactly the same experiment i e the insertion of the jellyfish GFP protein coding gene on numerous other animals cats dogs etc previously and did not create Alba known to the researchers only as Rabbit Number 5256 under the direction of Kac The laboratory consequently kept possession of the transgenic rabbit which it had created and funded and the transgenic art was never exhibited at the Digital Avignon festival 2000 as intended Kac claiming that his rabbit was the first GFP bunny created in the name of Art used this dispute to popularize the issue as one of disguised censorship by launching a Free Alba campaign A doctored photo of the artist holding a day glow green tinted rabbit appears on his website 44 The members of the Critical Art Ensemble have written books and staged multimedia performance interventions around this issue including The Flesh Machine focusing on in vitro fertilisation surveillance of the body and liberal eugenics and Cult of the New Eve In order to analyze how in their words Science is the institution of authority regarding the production of knowledge and tends to replace this particular social function of conventional Christianity in the west 45 Heather Dewey Hagborg is an information artist and biohacker who uses genomic DNA left behind by people as a starting point for creating lifelike computer generated 3 D portraits 46 47 Criticism and concerns EditBiohacking experiences many of the same criticisms as synthetic biology and genetic engineering already receive plus other concerns relating to the distributed and non institutional nature of the work involving potential hazards with lack of oversight by professionals or governments Concerns about biohackers creating pathogens in unmonitored garage laboratories led the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI to begin sending its representatives to DIYbio conferences in 2009 7 The arrest and prosecution of some members for their work with harmless microbes such as artivist Steve Kurtz has been denounced as political repression by critics who argue the U S government has used post 9 11 anti terrorism powers to intimidate artists and others who use their art to criticize society 48 Existing regulations are not specific to this field so that the possibility of pathogenic organisms being created and released unintentionally or intentionally by biohackers has become a matter of concern for example in the spirit of the re creation of the 1917 flu virus by Armed Forces Institute of Pathology researchers in 2005 49 In the US the FBI Weapons of Mass Destruction Directorate has worked with the American Association for the Advancement of Science s National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity to convene a series of meetings to discuss biosecurity which have included discussions of amateur biologists and ways to manage the risks to society it poses 50 51 8 16 At the National Institutes of Health National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity 52 leads efforts to educate the public on dual use research of concern for example with websites like Science Safety Security 53 In 2011 DIYbio organized conferences to attempt to create codes of ethics for biohackers 54 Pat Mooney executive director of ETC Group is a critic of biohacking who argues that using a laptop computer published gene sequence information and mail order synthetic DNA just about anyone has the potential to construct genes or entire genomes from scratch including those of the lethal pathogens in the near future citation needed A 2007 ETC Group report warns that the danger of this development is not just bio terror but bio error 55 While no DIYbio project to date has involved harmful agents the fear remains in the minds of both regulators and laypersons However it is often pointed out that DIYbio is at too early a stage to consider such advanced projects feasible as few successful transformative genetics projects have been undertaken yet It is also worth noting that while an individual could conceivably do harm with sufficient skill and intent there exist biology labs throughout the world with greater access to the technology skill and funding to accomplish a bioweapons project citation needed While detractors argue that do it yourself biologists need some sort of supervision enthusiasts argue that uniform supervision is impossible and the best way to prevent accidents or malevolence is to encourage a culture of transparency where in essence do it yourself biologists would be peer reviewed by other biohackers 56 Enthusiasts argue that fear of potential hazards should be met with increased research and education rather than closing the door on the profound positive impacts that distributed biological technology will have on human health the environment and the standard of living around the world 57 Due to the lack of precedent regarding such a business model the DIYbio founders see this as an opportunity to be innovators in regulatory and safety policy 8 Groups and organizations EditBaltimore Underground Science Space BUGSS in Baltimore Maryland 58 Biocurious in Sunnyvale California 59 Biofoundry in Sydney New South Wales 60 Biospacesg in Singapore 61 Bricobio in Montreal Quebec 62 63 Boston Open Science Laboratory BOSLab in Cambridge Massachusetts 64 Capital Area BioSpace CABS in Bethesda Maryland 65 66 Charlottesville Open Bio Lab in Charlottesville Virginia 65 Counter Culture Labs in Oakland California 67 68 Denver Biolabs in Denver Colorado 69 George H Stephenson Foundation Bioengineering Educational Laboratory amp Bio MakerSpace at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia Pennsylvania 70 Four Thieves Vinegar Collective 71 Genspace in Brooklyn New York Hackuarium in Ecublens 72 International Hackteria Society registered in Switzerland established the Global Hackteria Network since 2009 La Paillasse in Paris 59 London Biohackspace in London 73 the Open Insulin Project an international collaboration 74 Open Science Network in Vancouver British Columbia 75 Ottawa Bio Science in Ottawa Ontario Triangle DIY Biology in Durham NC Victoria Makerspace in Victoria British ColumbiaSee also EditAmateur chemistry Open scienceReferences Edit Hicks Jennifer 2014 03 15 The Biohacking Hobbyist Forbes Retrieved 2016 06 19 Michels Spencer 2014 09 23 What is biohacking and why should we care PBS NewsHour Retrieved 2015 10 30 Katz Sylvan 6 January 1990 Forum Roses are black violets are green The emergence of amateur genetic engineers New Scientist Retrieved 2015 10 25 Katz J S 1990 That which is not forbidden is Mandatory Education 4 1 ISSN 0955 6621 Schrage Michael 1988 01 31 Playing God in your basement The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2015 10 25 Carlson Rob May 2005 Splice It Yourself Who needs a geneticist Build your own lab Wired a b Ledford Heidi 2010 Garage Life hackers Nature 467 7316 650 2 doi 10 1038 467650a PMID 20930820 a b PBS News Hour YouTube 31 Dec 2008 Archived from the original on 2021 12 20 Mosher Dave 2010 12 16 DIY Biotech Hacker Space Opens in NYC Wired Retrieved 2017 07 25 BioCurious Officially Opens Test DNA Build Equipment Find a Co founder and More Make Magazine 2011 10 14 Retrieved 2017 07 25 Dariusz Jemielniak Aleksandra Przegalinska 18 February 2020 Collaborative Society MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 35645 9 Biohack the Planet Conference Biohack the Planet Retrieved 2016 06 19 Rob Carlson on synthetic biology The Economist Archived from the original on 2011 10 09 Wu Chen Yi Hu Hsiao Yun Chow Lok Hi et al 22 June 2015 The Effects of Anti Dementia and Nootropic Treatments on the Mortality of Patients with Dementia A Population Based Cohort Study in Taiwan PLOS ONE 10 6 e0130993 Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1030993W doi 10 1371 journal pone 0130993 PMC 4476616 PMID 26098910 Singh Honey 2 February 2020 How to Biohack Your Metabolism Do BioHacking Heindel Jerrold J Blumberg Bruce Cave Mathew et al March 2017 Metabolism disrupting chemicals and metabolic disorders Reproductive Toxicology 68 3 33 doi 10 1016 j reprotox 2016 10 001 PMC 5365353 PMID 27760374 Prigent Sylvain Frioux Clemence Dittami Simon M Thiele Sven Larhlimi Abdelhalim Collet Guillaume Gutknecht Fabien Got Jeanne Eveillard Damien Bourdon Jeremie Plewniak Frederic Tonon Thierry Siegel Anne 27 January 2017 Meneco a Topology Based Gap Filling Tool Applicable to Degraded Genome Wide Metabolic Networks PLOS Computational Biology 13 1 e1005276 Bibcode 2017PLSCB 13E5276P doi 10 1371 journal pcbi 1005276 PMC 5302834 PMID 28129330 Anderson Jason R Hagerdorn Payton L Gunstad John Spitznagel Mary Beth July 2018 Using coffee to compensate for poor sleep Impact on vigilance and implications for workplace performance Applied Ergonomics 70 142 147 doi 10 1016 j apergo 2018 02 026 PMID 29866304 Pearce Joshua M 14 September 2012 Building Research Equipment with Free Open Source Hardware Science 337 6100 1303 1304 Bibcode 2012Sci 337 1303P doi 10 1126 science 1228183 PMID 22984059 S2CID 44722829 BUGSS Membership BUGSS Archived from the original on 2017 08 25 Retrieved 2016 06 17 Biocurious Membership Biocurious Retrieved 2016 06 17 Counter Culture Labs Membership Counter Culture Labs Retrieved 2016 06 17 DremelFuge A One Piece Centrifuge for Rotary Tools Thingiverse 2009 12 23 Retrieved 2016 06 17 Jankowski Tito 2011 07 06 DNA is now DIY OpenPCR ships worldwide Make Pocket PCR for pennies LavaAmp Archived from the original on 2015 11 06 Retrieved 2015 10 26 Coffee Cup PCR Thermocycler costing under 350 Instructables 2009 06 13 Retrieved 2016 06 17 OpenDrop OpenDrop Retrieved 2016 06 17 DIY NanoDrop DIY NanoDrop Hackteria Retrieved 2016 06 17 Landoni Boris 11 July 2014 Interview to Open Trons Open Electronics Open Source Electronics Retrieved 1 November 2016 Open Cell is hosting monthly biohackathons to develop equipment software and products to make better and more affordable biolaboratories OpenCell bio OpenCell Retrieved 2019 08 17 Todd Kuiken 2016 03 09 Governance Learn from DIY biologists Nature Magazine 531 7593 167 168 Bibcode 2016Natur 531 167K doi 10 1038 531167a PMID 26961642 Yin Steph 2016 05 03 Is DIY Kitchen CRISPR A Class Issue Popular Science Retrieved 2016 06 19 Hicks Jennifer 2014 03 15 The Biohacking Hobbyist Forbes Retrieved 2016 06 19 Biocurious Meetup Meetup Meetup 2016 06 25 Retrieved 2016 06 17 Krieger Lisa M 2016 01 11 Bay Area biologist s gene editing kit lets do it yourselfers play God at the kitchen table San Jose Mercury News Retrieved 2016 06 17 Ossola Alexandra 2015 11 18 These Biohackers Are Creating Open Source Insulin Popular Science Retrieved 2016 06 17 Duhaime Ross Arielle 2016 05 04 A Bitter Pill The Verge Linebaugh Kate 2016 05 09 Tech savvy Families use homebuilt diabetes device Wall Street Journal LoopDocs loopkit github io Retrieved 2022 07 25 Welcome to the AndroidAPS documentation AndroidAPS 3 0 documentation androidaps readthedocs io Retrieved 2022 07 25 Neifer Anna 2015 11 09 Biohackers are implanting LEDs under their skin Motherboard Dvorsky George 2016 03 27 This Biohacker Used Eyedrops To Give Himself Temporary Night Vision Gizmodo Thaddeus Johns Josie 2017 01 06 Meet the first humans to sense where north is The Guardian Retrieved 2018 06 02 Dickey Christopher April 2001 I Love My Glow Bunny a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help Critical Art Ensemble critical art net Archived from the original on 2015 11 13 Retrieved 2015 11 20 Jenkins Mark 2013 09 18 A Cyber exhibit as timely as the news Washington Post p E18 Krulwich Robert 2013 06 28 Artist plays detective Can I reconstruct a face from a piece of hair NPR Retrieved 7 August 2014 The Associated Press October 29 2007 Scientist pleads guilty to mailing bacteria for bio art First Amendment Center Archived from the original on 2009 02 10 The 1918 flu virus is resurrected Nature 437 7060 794 5 October 2005 Bibcode 2005Natur 437 794 doi 10 1038 437794a PMC 7095040 PMID 16208326 Zimmer Carl March 5 2012 Amateurs Are New Fear in Creating Mutant Virus The New York Times Prepared by the American Association for the Advancement of Science in conjunction with the Association of American Universities Association of Public and Land grant Universities and the Federal Bureau of Investigation Bridging Science and Security for Biological Research A Discussion about Dual Use Review and Oversight at Research Institutions Report of a Meeting September 13 14 2012 Archived 2012 10 28 at the Wayback Machine NSABB Official Website Science Safety Security official website The role of codes of conduct in the amateur biology community Retrieved 4 February 2014 ETC Group January 2007 Extreme Genetic Engineering An Introduction to Synthetic Biology PDF Retrieved 2012 09 28 Boustead Greg December 11 2008 The Biohacking Hobbyist Seed Magazine Archived from the original on 2019 10 06 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link DIYbio FAQ Grunewald Scott J 29 October 2015 A Biotechnology Makerspace called BUGSS is Helping Make Baltimore a 3D Bioprinting Hub 3DPrint Retrieved 29 October 2015 a b Biohackers of the world unite The Economist 6 September 2014 Retrieved 21 April 2016 Terzis Gillian 15 August 2015 Biohackers at the DIY BioFoundry The Saturday Paper Retrieved 21 April 2016 BIOSPACESG Singapore Singapore Bricobio Jain Vipal 18 March 2015 SynBio is fast lane to entrepreneurial high tech opportunities Genetic Literacy Project Retrieved 21 April 2016 This DIY Biolab Wants To Make Scientists Out Of Us All News 2017 11 15 Retrieved 2020 12 19 a b Mandell Josh July 30 2017 Open Bio Labs hosts conference for community based science Charlottesville Tomorrow Retrieved 2018 06 02 Capital Area BioSpace Retrieved 2018 06 02 Best DIY Science Group East Bay Express No Best of the East Bay 2015 22 July 2015 Retrieved 21 April 2016 Wohlsen Marcus 15 April 2015 Cow Milk Without the Cow Is Coming to Change Food Forever Wired Retrieved 21 April 2016 Pauwels Eleonore January 5 2018 The Rise of Citizen Bioscience Scientific American Retrieved 2018 06 16 BE Labs belabs seas upenn edu Retrieved 2019 06 27 Piller Charles An Anarchist Is Teaching Patients to Make Their Own Medications Scientific American Gasche Delphine 9 August 2015 Des biologistes alternatifs s epanouissent a Renens 24heures ch in French Retrieved 21 April 2016 Hahn Jennifer 25 October 2015 London Biohackspace a link between science and the public EastLondonLines Retrieved 21 April 2016 Burningham Grant October 24 2019 The Price of Insulin Has Soared These Biohackers Have a Plan to Fix It Time Retrieved 2019 12 14 Open Science Network Open Science Network Retrieved 2019 05 09 External links EditDIYbio org a community for DIY biology beginners Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Do it yourself biology amp oldid 1115445609, wikipedia, 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