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Title Page
• Name: Hayk Barseghyan
• Major: Physiological Science, Russian
  Language and Literature
• Date: June 6, 2012
• Class: Honors 177 (UCLA Spring 12)
• Professor: Victoria Vesna
Blog 1
• My name is Hayk Barseghyan and I am a fourth year
  Physiological Science Major. Since childhood I was
  terrible at anything that had to do with art. My
  drawings were the worst in the class, and literature did
  not interest me at all. So, I turned all my attention and
  effort into sciences and here I am today. I have lived for
  about two decades now and have no idea what art is
  and how to understand it. I realize that there is
  something more to this world than precise answers.
  Thus, I decided to enroll in this class to learn about the
  art from a point of view of sciences that I am familiar
  with.
• The two cultures art and biotechnology are very
  distinctive areas of study, but that is only the first
  thought. Most of the art that is has been produced in
  the world has been a pure copy of the nature which is
  biology. The art has been repeating itself for many
  generations. The newer field of biotechnology brings
  newer areas where art could be created from biological
  and technological point. There is stereotype that art
  and science are two distinct areas and many
  universities concentrate more on the sciences leaving
  art to wonder around. Let us not forget that there is
  integration and interaction in almost every field of
  study, biology and art are not an exception. Many
  biological technologies have been created to suit not
  only the purpose, but also the looks.
There countless examples of art integrating with science
and vice versa. However, the one that really caught my
attention was the creation and modernization of total
mechanical hearts incorporated into living human beings
for survival.
Bibliography:
• ARTIFICIAL HEART June 24, 2009
• http://rwjms.umdnj.edu/news_publications/news_release/AbioCor
  _Heart.html
• The Total Artificial Heart
• http://www.polyurethanes.org/blog/2011/11/the-total-artificial-
  heart/
• Ducati Design Contest
• http://www.motorcycledaily.com/2004/06/21june04ducati/
• Art and Biotechnology: When Art looks into Science
• http://therestisart.wordpress.com/2010/10/26/art-and-
  biotechnology-when-...
• The Role of Biotechnology in Art Preservation
• http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167779905002
  726
Blog 2
• I have always wondered if it would be possible to produce
  enough food for the whole world without genetic modification.
  First of all, I think that there would not be these many people in
  the world without the ability of humanity to produce more food.
  So, maybe the development and progress of genetic
  modification of products stimulated population growth as a
  result of excess food. People would think that genetically
  modified food should not pose any danger to humans, but all it
  takes is one successful mutation of a virus and many people
  could die or become ill because of consumption of those foods.
  There could also be partial integration of those unusual genes
  into human genome over time of excessive genetically modified
  food consumption. Not much proof is provided by scientist to
  support either side of the argument.
Cows being raised in a farm.
• My family comes from a background where meat
  consumption is one of the main sources of daily
  meal. I am used to eating meat regularly, but I
  have never thought there could be more harm
  from it than good. Fifty years ago when people
  grew their own food it was safe to eat whatever
  they grew because it was grown on natural
  products. Today, big farms make cattle to eat corn
  which is not what animals are supposed to eat,
  this result in a higher levels of fats in the animal
  which human consume that potentially leads to
  cardiovascular diseases. And this is one side
  effect that we are aware of. The meat that I and
  my family have been consuming for the last
  several years came from those farms.
Organically raised organic cow.
• I am now inclined to control whatever I eat
  and try to consume natural organically raised
  products because I do not know what long
  term consumption of genetically modified
  foods could lead, but certainly know that
  organic food will not lead to anything bad
  because it has been consumed by people for
  thousands of years.
• Industrial farm:
Bibliography:
• "What Are the Dangers?” Mothers for Natural Law. Web. 6 Nov.
  2009.
• Moeller, Lorena, and Kan Wang. “Engineering with Precision: Tools
  for the New Generation of Transgenic Crops.” BioScience 58.5
  (2008): 391+. Expanded Academic ASAP. Web. 10 Nov. 2009.
• Union of Concerned Scientists. “The Safeness of Genetically
  Modified Foods Is Unproven.” Opposing Viewpoints: Genetic
  Engineering (2009). Web. 1 Nov.     2009.
• “20 Questions on Genetically Modified (GM) Foods.” World Health
  Organization: Food Safety. Web. 31 October 2009.
• Genetically Modified Foods: Harmful or Helpful? Deborah B.
  Whitman Apr. 2000
• http://www.csa.com/discoveryguides/gmfood/overview.php
Blog 3
• Genetic Engineering has been used throughout human history to
  select phenotypes or genes that are most favorable. I think that
  there is nothing wrong with that. Just as humans in the past
  have been able to domesticate and grow some wild type plants
  and animals through long period of time, today humans are able
  to do such selections in a shorter period of time due to advances
  in technology. Some might think that it could bring some bad
  consequences, but that statement has not been proven. We can
  think of Genetic Engineering the same way as Natural Selection
  that Darwin explained in his book “Origins of Species.” Natural
  Selection selects the most desirable genes for the future
  generation and Genetic Engineering works the same way. The
  only difference is that it is done primarily by humans and not
  nature.
• I will be honest I do not really like seeing animals
  in the zoos or as pets. I think every animal
  deserves to live in the wild just like any one of us
  would never want to be imprisoned. There are
  exceptions though. Some animals require human
  care and in those situations it is fine to live by
  symbiosis. There are many cases in the world
  when humans torture their pets and then kill
  them fun. I think that some of these people
  should be imprisoned or fined, but many would
  disagree because industrial farms kill millions of
  animals and to provide human population with
  food.
• I enjoyed watching “Strange Culture” that
  showed the work of Kurtz and how FBI was
  mislead to convict him for killing his wife. It is
  quite understandable because there are so many
  cases in which one of the partners kills another
  for any reason that it is almost an instinct in
  police organizations to suspect husband or wife
  first and then go from there looking for evidence.
  Of course, it was pitiful to watch how one’s life,
  career and work could be destroyed in such a
  short period of time, but I am very proud of Kurtz
  because he fought till the end for his rights. Not
  many people have the strength to do that.
Bibliography:
• Genetic Engeneering:
• http://saraalgoe.hubpages.com/hub/Genetic-
  Engineering
• http://online.sfsu.edu/~rone/GEessays/gedanger.htm
• http://www.ucsusa.org/food_and_agriculture/science_
  and_impacts/science/w...
• Animal Abuse:
• http://www.pet-abuse.com/pages/animal_cruelty.php
• http://www.dosomething.org/tipsandtools/11-facts-
  about-animal-cruelty
Blog 4
• Noa’s exhibition was very interesting and memorable.
  It caught my attention because I never actually thought
  of things in that manner nor did I ever imagine looking
  at dust of pollen particles under microscope trying to
  figure out their three dimensional structure. What Noa
  did was absolutely fascinating to me and probably to
  most people that encountered her work. After seeing
  her presentation I can’t stop myself thinking about the
  smallest particles that make up different things. It’s like
  I want to know how everything looks under the
  microscope. I was one of the fortunate people that
  attended Noa’s exhibition. There I was able to apply
  everything she referred to in her presentation to the
  actual bodies of work that were presented on
  exhibition.
• Noa’s work also showed that everything in our world is
  interconnected to each other in some degree. These interactions
  make possible the life as we know to exist on Earth. Humans should
  try to preserve these interactions in order to conserve the biological
  balance that exists. Even destroying one little part of a chain will
  cause it to break overtime.
• There are many examples of medical technology
  and art used hand in hand. The most fascinating
  to be is the three dimensional structure of
  proteins in human bodies. There is countless
  number of art works designed by humans
  throughout the world, but our organism still is a
  leader in that area. Most of the human body is
  made up of proteins and there have to millions of
  different shapes of them in order to perform one
  particular function, be it protection by immune
  system or structural building blocks of organism.
  All these proteins coexist in balance and interact
  with each other to create an organism such as us.
Architecture around the world:
Protein structure:
Bibliography:
• http://www.historyofinformation.com/index.php?cate
  gory=Art+and+Science%2C+Medicine%2C+Technology
• http://tkcollier.wordpress.com/2010/10/17/everyday-
  things-under-the-electron-microscope/
• http://www.vivo.colostate.edu/hbooks/genetics/biotec
  h/basics/prostruct.html
• http://www.eurekalert.org/features/doe/2004-
  12/ddoe-tao122204.php
• http://may-k.livejournal.com/
• http://www.noapkaplan.com/
Blog 6
• I thought that Kathy Brew’s exhibit “Going Gray” was
  just fascinating. I agree with her that in our society
  there is a fear of aging and specifically having gray hair.
  Many people just do not want to accept the fact that
  they will get older no matter what they do be plastic
  surgery cosmetic creams or hair coloring. I also think
  that we should educate the population that it is natural
  to get older and that people should not fear it. Exhibits
  such as Kathy Brew’s “Going Gray” is very interesting
  way of conveying the thought of normality to people
  by showing personal experiences and ways in which we
  can adapt to aging.
• The interviews that were shown in the
  documentary shown on exhibit “Going Gray”
  several different scientist and doctors were
  discussing different reasons of hair becoming
  gray. The truth is that it depends on an individual.
  There could be many reasons for a person to go
  gray such as nutritional imbalance, aging, genetic
  inheritance, environmental stress, immune
  malfunction, loss of protein complexes that are
  responsible for hair color. All these can cause hair
  graying. The important thing is that people need
  to understand that it is natural and not fear it.
• However, when people do go grey they might
  not like the way they look. There is no fear of
  aging, it is simply cosmetic dislike. In such case
  I think it is explainable for a person to try to
  change the way he or she looks by any means
  necessary if that would bring personal
  satisfaction and will not harm the overall
  health of the person. One Chinese “He Shou
  Wu” helps to retain hair color naturally, but
  this does not mean that using hair coloring
  reagents or other things is wrong.
Bibliography:
• http://artsci.ucla.edu/?q=events/genetics-aging-
  symposium-going-gray-kathy-brew-exhibition-
  opening
• http://www.humantouchofchemistry.com/why-
  does-hair-turn-grey.htm
• http://hairstylerandremoval.com/he-shou-wu-
  the-powerful-chinese-herb-for-treating-hair-loss
• http://www.lhj.com/style/hair/advice/how-to-
  love-your-gray-hair/
• http://www.beliefnet.com/Health/2006/05/Fear-
  Of-Aging-How-To-Get-Over-It.aspx
Blog 7 (Extra Credit)
• Lejla Kucukalic’s lecture on Biotech and
  Biopunk was fascinating to me. I had never
  thought that science fiction and genetics
  could be interconnected with each other to
  produce such great ideas and inventions that
  were presented in the lecture. Professor
  Kucukalic talked a little about the Mary
  Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) who was created
  in the laboratory to imitate a human being.
• I think the combination of biotechnology and
  genetics is the future of humanity. However, in
  comparison with Frankenstein I think that a
  better way of building or modifying a person
  would be by taking the best of many and
  combining them in one. This way it would be
  possible to save years of research spent on
  building a person from scratch meaning that the
  genome would be human engineered. A better
  way is to take already present genes and
  incorporate them into one single genome that
  will produce an ultimate man. Faster, stronger,
  and more intelligent.
Bibliography:
• http://marvel.com/characters/bio/1009726/x-
  men
• http://socgen.ucla.edu/events/?event_id=85
• http://fictionencyclopedia.wikia.com/wiki/Vict
  or_Frankenstein
• http://hayesaplit.blogspot.com/2011_04_01_
  archive.html
• http://www.fanpop.com/spots/x-
  men/images/58082/title/x-men-wallpaper
Blog 8 (Memories Stored In DNA)
Human brain has the ability to store and transmit
memories using images. There is specialized area in
the brain called Hippocampus that is involved in
storage and generation of memories. The way
memories are sored is still not quite understood.
However, it is speculated that visual or any other
stimuli that a person perceives is accompanied by
production of proteins in the brain that are involved
in generation of new neuronal connections in the
brain.
It is possible to design a gene by genetic
engineering and insert it into human cell using
ballistics. A special air pressurized gun will shoot
millions of copies of desired gene into cells some of
which will become incorporated into cell's genome.
The inserted recombinant DNA in the cells will be
transcribed and translated into a protein which will
later be carried out from the cell into the
bloodstream and taken into the brain region
involved in memory generation and retrieval.
Depending on the design of the gene and its
product the person will get different images
appear in his imagination starting from known
pieces of art to any other custom generated
memories. This technology will be crucial in
using human genetic programming in
information storage. Retrieval of the information
can be performed using any human subject
since the mechanism is the same from person to
person.
Bibliography:
• http://ducknetweb.blogspot.com/2008/06/how-
  to-use-gene-gun.html
• http://www.frontiersin.org/human_neuroscience
  /10.3389/neuro.09.031.2009/full
• http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2008/
  09/09/neanderthal/?q=/2008/09/neanderthal.ht
  ml
• http://www.globalchange.com/geneticengin.htm
• http://science.howstuffworks.com/environmenta
  l/life/human-biology/human-memory.htm
Summary
• Name: Hayk Barseghyan
• Major: Physiological Science, Russian
  Language and Literature
• Date: June 6, 2012
• Class: Honors 177 (UCLA Spring 12)
• Professor: Victoria Vesna

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Barseghyan h 177_final

  • 1. Title Page • Name: Hayk Barseghyan • Major: Physiological Science, Russian Language and Literature • Date: June 6, 2012 • Class: Honors 177 (UCLA Spring 12) • Professor: Victoria Vesna
  • 2. Blog 1 • My name is Hayk Barseghyan and I am a fourth year Physiological Science Major. Since childhood I was terrible at anything that had to do with art. My drawings were the worst in the class, and literature did not interest me at all. So, I turned all my attention and effort into sciences and here I am today. I have lived for about two decades now and have no idea what art is and how to understand it. I realize that there is something more to this world than precise answers. Thus, I decided to enroll in this class to learn about the art from a point of view of sciences that I am familiar with.
  • 3.
  • 4. • The two cultures art and biotechnology are very distinctive areas of study, but that is only the first thought. Most of the art that is has been produced in the world has been a pure copy of the nature which is biology. The art has been repeating itself for many generations. The newer field of biotechnology brings newer areas where art could be created from biological and technological point. There is stereotype that art and science are two distinct areas and many universities concentrate more on the sciences leaving art to wonder around. Let us not forget that there is integration and interaction in almost every field of study, biology and art are not an exception. Many biological technologies have been created to suit not only the purpose, but also the looks.
  • 5. There countless examples of art integrating with science and vice versa. However, the one that really caught my attention was the creation and modernization of total mechanical hearts incorporated into living human beings for survival.
  • 6. Bibliography: • ARTIFICIAL HEART June 24, 2009 • http://rwjms.umdnj.edu/news_publications/news_release/AbioCor _Heart.html • The Total Artificial Heart • http://www.polyurethanes.org/blog/2011/11/the-total-artificial- heart/ • Ducati Design Contest • http://www.motorcycledaily.com/2004/06/21june04ducati/ • Art and Biotechnology: When Art looks into Science • http://therestisart.wordpress.com/2010/10/26/art-and- biotechnology-when-... • The Role of Biotechnology in Art Preservation • http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167779905002 726
  • 7. Blog 2 • I have always wondered if it would be possible to produce enough food for the whole world without genetic modification. First of all, I think that there would not be these many people in the world without the ability of humanity to produce more food. So, maybe the development and progress of genetic modification of products stimulated population growth as a result of excess food. People would think that genetically modified food should not pose any danger to humans, but all it takes is one successful mutation of a virus and many people could die or become ill because of consumption of those foods. There could also be partial integration of those unusual genes into human genome over time of excessive genetically modified food consumption. Not much proof is provided by scientist to support either side of the argument.
  • 8. Cows being raised in a farm.
  • 9. • My family comes from a background where meat consumption is one of the main sources of daily meal. I am used to eating meat regularly, but I have never thought there could be more harm from it than good. Fifty years ago when people grew their own food it was safe to eat whatever they grew because it was grown on natural products. Today, big farms make cattle to eat corn which is not what animals are supposed to eat, this result in a higher levels of fats in the animal which human consume that potentially leads to cardiovascular diseases. And this is one side effect that we are aware of. The meat that I and my family have been consuming for the last several years came from those farms.
  • 11. • I am now inclined to control whatever I eat and try to consume natural organically raised products because I do not know what long term consumption of genetically modified foods could lead, but certainly know that organic food will not lead to anything bad because it has been consumed by people for thousands of years.
  • 13. Bibliography: • "What Are the Dangers?” Mothers for Natural Law. Web. 6 Nov. 2009. • Moeller, Lorena, and Kan Wang. “Engineering with Precision: Tools for the New Generation of Transgenic Crops.” BioScience 58.5 (2008): 391+. Expanded Academic ASAP. Web. 10 Nov. 2009. • Union of Concerned Scientists. “The Safeness of Genetically Modified Foods Is Unproven.” Opposing Viewpoints: Genetic Engineering (2009). Web. 1 Nov. 2009. • “20 Questions on Genetically Modified (GM) Foods.” World Health Organization: Food Safety. Web. 31 October 2009. • Genetically Modified Foods: Harmful or Helpful? Deborah B. Whitman Apr. 2000 • http://www.csa.com/discoveryguides/gmfood/overview.php
  • 14. Blog 3 • Genetic Engineering has been used throughout human history to select phenotypes or genes that are most favorable. I think that there is nothing wrong with that. Just as humans in the past have been able to domesticate and grow some wild type plants and animals through long period of time, today humans are able to do such selections in a shorter period of time due to advances in technology. Some might think that it could bring some bad consequences, but that statement has not been proven. We can think of Genetic Engineering the same way as Natural Selection that Darwin explained in his book “Origins of Species.” Natural Selection selects the most desirable genes for the future generation and Genetic Engineering works the same way. The only difference is that it is done primarily by humans and not nature.
  • 15.
  • 16. • I will be honest I do not really like seeing animals in the zoos or as pets. I think every animal deserves to live in the wild just like any one of us would never want to be imprisoned. There are exceptions though. Some animals require human care and in those situations it is fine to live by symbiosis. There are many cases in the world when humans torture their pets and then kill them fun. I think that some of these people should be imprisoned or fined, but many would disagree because industrial farms kill millions of animals and to provide human population with food.
  • 17.
  • 18. • I enjoyed watching “Strange Culture” that showed the work of Kurtz and how FBI was mislead to convict him for killing his wife. It is quite understandable because there are so many cases in which one of the partners kills another for any reason that it is almost an instinct in police organizations to suspect husband or wife first and then go from there looking for evidence. Of course, it was pitiful to watch how one’s life, career and work could be destroyed in such a short period of time, but I am very proud of Kurtz because he fought till the end for his rights. Not many people have the strength to do that.
  • 19. Bibliography: • Genetic Engeneering: • http://saraalgoe.hubpages.com/hub/Genetic- Engineering • http://online.sfsu.edu/~rone/GEessays/gedanger.htm • http://www.ucsusa.org/food_and_agriculture/science_ and_impacts/science/w... • Animal Abuse: • http://www.pet-abuse.com/pages/animal_cruelty.php • http://www.dosomething.org/tipsandtools/11-facts- about-animal-cruelty
  • 20. Blog 4 • Noa’s exhibition was very interesting and memorable. It caught my attention because I never actually thought of things in that manner nor did I ever imagine looking at dust of pollen particles under microscope trying to figure out their three dimensional structure. What Noa did was absolutely fascinating to me and probably to most people that encountered her work. After seeing her presentation I can’t stop myself thinking about the smallest particles that make up different things. It’s like I want to know how everything looks under the microscope. I was one of the fortunate people that attended Noa’s exhibition. There I was able to apply everything she referred to in her presentation to the actual bodies of work that were presented on exhibition.
  • 21.
  • 22. • Noa’s work also showed that everything in our world is interconnected to each other in some degree. These interactions make possible the life as we know to exist on Earth. Humans should try to preserve these interactions in order to conserve the biological balance that exists. Even destroying one little part of a chain will cause it to break overtime.
  • 23. • There are many examples of medical technology and art used hand in hand. The most fascinating to be is the three dimensional structure of proteins in human bodies. There is countless number of art works designed by humans throughout the world, but our organism still is a leader in that area. Most of the human body is made up of proteins and there have to millions of different shapes of them in order to perform one particular function, be it protection by immune system or structural building blocks of organism. All these proteins coexist in balance and interact with each other to create an organism such as us.
  • 26. Bibliography: • http://www.historyofinformation.com/index.php?cate gory=Art+and+Science%2C+Medicine%2C+Technology • http://tkcollier.wordpress.com/2010/10/17/everyday- things-under-the-electron-microscope/ • http://www.vivo.colostate.edu/hbooks/genetics/biotec h/basics/prostruct.html • http://www.eurekalert.org/features/doe/2004- 12/ddoe-tao122204.php • http://may-k.livejournal.com/ • http://www.noapkaplan.com/
  • 27. Blog 6 • I thought that Kathy Brew’s exhibit “Going Gray” was just fascinating. I agree with her that in our society there is a fear of aging and specifically having gray hair. Many people just do not want to accept the fact that they will get older no matter what they do be plastic surgery cosmetic creams or hair coloring. I also think that we should educate the population that it is natural to get older and that people should not fear it. Exhibits such as Kathy Brew’s “Going Gray” is very interesting way of conveying the thought of normality to people by showing personal experiences and ways in which we can adapt to aging.
  • 28.
  • 29. • The interviews that were shown in the documentary shown on exhibit “Going Gray” several different scientist and doctors were discussing different reasons of hair becoming gray. The truth is that it depends on an individual. There could be many reasons for a person to go gray such as nutritional imbalance, aging, genetic inheritance, environmental stress, immune malfunction, loss of protein complexes that are responsible for hair color. All these can cause hair graying. The important thing is that people need to understand that it is natural and not fear it.
  • 30.
  • 31. • However, when people do go grey they might not like the way they look. There is no fear of aging, it is simply cosmetic dislike. In such case I think it is explainable for a person to try to change the way he or she looks by any means necessary if that would bring personal satisfaction and will not harm the overall health of the person. One Chinese “He Shou Wu” helps to retain hair color naturally, but this does not mean that using hair coloring reagents or other things is wrong.
  • 32. Bibliography: • http://artsci.ucla.edu/?q=events/genetics-aging- symposium-going-gray-kathy-brew-exhibition- opening • http://www.humantouchofchemistry.com/why- does-hair-turn-grey.htm • http://hairstylerandremoval.com/he-shou-wu- the-powerful-chinese-herb-for-treating-hair-loss • http://www.lhj.com/style/hair/advice/how-to- love-your-gray-hair/ • http://www.beliefnet.com/Health/2006/05/Fear- Of-Aging-How-To-Get-Over-It.aspx
  • 33. Blog 7 (Extra Credit) • Lejla Kucukalic’s lecture on Biotech and Biopunk was fascinating to me. I had never thought that science fiction and genetics could be interconnected with each other to produce such great ideas and inventions that were presented in the lecture. Professor Kucukalic talked a little about the Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) who was created in the laboratory to imitate a human being.
  • 34.
  • 35. • I think the combination of biotechnology and genetics is the future of humanity. However, in comparison with Frankenstein I think that a better way of building or modifying a person would be by taking the best of many and combining them in one. This way it would be possible to save years of research spent on building a person from scratch meaning that the genome would be human engineered. A better way is to take already present genes and incorporate them into one single genome that will produce an ultimate man. Faster, stronger, and more intelligent.
  • 36.
  • 37. Bibliography: • http://marvel.com/characters/bio/1009726/x- men • http://socgen.ucla.edu/events/?event_id=85 • http://fictionencyclopedia.wikia.com/wiki/Vict or_Frankenstein • http://hayesaplit.blogspot.com/2011_04_01_ archive.html • http://www.fanpop.com/spots/x- men/images/58082/title/x-men-wallpaper
  • 38. Blog 8 (Memories Stored In DNA) Human brain has the ability to store and transmit memories using images. There is specialized area in the brain called Hippocampus that is involved in storage and generation of memories. The way memories are sored is still not quite understood. However, it is speculated that visual or any other stimuli that a person perceives is accompanied by production of proteins in the brain that are involved in generation of new neuronal connections in the brain.
  • 39.
  • 40. It is possible to design a gene by genetic engineering and insert it into human cell using ballistics. A special air pressurized gun will shoot millions of copies of desired gene into cells some of which will become incorporated into cell's genome. The inserted recombinant DNA in the cells will be transcribed and translated into a protein which will later be carried out from the cell into the bloodstream and taken into the brain region involved in memory generation and retrieval.
  • 41.
  • 42. Depending on the design of the gene and its product the person will get different images appear in his imagination starting from known pieces of art to any other custom generated memories. This technology will be crucial in using human genetic programming in information storage. Retrieval of the information can be performed using any human subject since the mechanism is the same from person to person.
  • 43.
  • 44. Bibliography: • http://ducknetweb.blogspot.com/2008/06/how- to-use-gene-gun.html • http://www.frontiersin.org/human_neuroscience /10.3389/neuro.09.031.2009/full • http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2008/ 09/09/neanderthal/?q=/2008/09/neanderthal.ht ml • http://www.globalchange.com/geneticengin.htm • http://science.howstuffworks.com/environmenta l/life/human-biology/human-memory.htm
  • 45. Summary • Name: Hayk Barseghyan • Major: Physiological Science, Russian Language and Literature • Date: June 6, 2012 • Class: Honors 177 (UCLA Spring 12) • Professor: Victoria Vesna