| Literature DB >> 29927545 |
Sonja Bäumel1, Hanne L P Tytgat2,3, Birgit Nemec4, Ruth Schmidt5,6, Loo Wee Chia2, Hauke Smidt2.
Abstract
The Human Microbiome, as well as the exploration of the microorganisms inhabiting the human body, are not only integral to the field of microbiology but represent an intrinsic part of all human beings. Consequently, along with scientists, artists have been inspired by the microbiome: transforming it in to tangible artefacts in order to critically question, reflect on and break down the barrier between humans and their microcohabitants. By artistic means, artists help us to understand how microbial research topics are inevitably affected by societal influences, including (health) politics, economics and the arts. Fifty Percent Human is a multidisciplinary artistic research project that aims to reshape our understanding of the human body and its environment as well as to explore possibilities for conscious coexistence in order to bridge the gap between science and society.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29927545 PMCID: PMC6011930 DOI: 10.1111/1751-7915.13285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Biotechnol ISSN: 1751-7915 Impact factor: 5.813
Figure 1From science to art: scientific data inspired the building of an in‐between space where people could meet their microbes. Principle component analysis (PCA) plots describe the relatedness of the microbial community composition (‘Who is there?’, A) and the relatedness of the volatile organic components (VOC) they emit to communicate (‘What are they communicating?’, B). Red data points represent samples from the cat's paws, green the microbiota of human hands and blue the microbes present on a tree leaf. Three biological replicates are depicted for the VOC analysis, and microbial community analysis is based on two biological replicates for each niche. All PCA plots were generated using MetaboAnalyst (Xia et al., 2015). These scientific results were used to inspire the blueprint of the in‐between space, by superimposing both PCA plots graphically (C), and to tangibly materialize (D, E, F) the installation. Panels D, E and F show an impression of the in‐between space as it premiered at Zone2Source, Greenhouse Amstelpark, Amsterdam, the Netherlands in October 2016.
Figure 2Where are they from? Electron microscopy image from bacteria on human skin.