Perhaps you could approach it the other way around, use sound to manipulate growth.
-- At last year's graduation show of the Royal Art Academy in The Hague Sebastian Frisch presented his Biophonic installation, containing roots of corn that grew towards a speaker.
http://www.codedmatters.nl/artist/sebastian-frisch/
Or take Matthijs Munnik's microscopic opera based on transgenic C. elegans made in collaboration with the Netherlands Consortium for Systems Biology: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TgumhLhfI6g
http://we-make-money-not-art.com/archives/2011/01/microscopic-opera.php
Also one of the participants in our biohack academy, Giacomo experimented with sound patterns.
On Thursday, April 30, 2015 at 8:07:27 PM UTC+2, Nathan McCorkle wrote:
On Thursday, April 30, 2015 at 8:07:27 PM UTC+2, Nathan McCorkle wrote:
On Wed, Apr 29, 2015 at 11:34 PM, Jonathan Cline <jnc...@gmail.com> wrote:
> So regarding the radio listening audience. Any audio will only come from
> the equipment you use.
Well you could poke a stick at a goat, or a puppy... they are biology
that would make audible gas and other noises. There was that blue/GFP
rabbit... though I don't think rabbits make much noise, and while the
bulk of the work could be done in 2 weeks... you'd need a while for it
to gestate.
Chicken embryos are pretty cool, you could easily isolate the heart
and get chunks/cells growing in culture within a day or two... but
you'd need quite the microphone to hear the beating (maybe a piezo
microphone would work if taped directly to the culture dish?)... or
some software to convert a video of the beating heart cells into audio
(I bet this actually wouldn't be too hard with some openCV in Python
or something). But I guess simply dissecting something isn't really
bioengineering.
Chicken embryo heart cells beating in culture
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M30-oInTKs4
Beating chick (chicken) embryo heart explant
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sJduWqtq-Ts
You could grow some yeast, trap the gas, then emit the gas through a
horn or harmonica... but again, simply growing something isn't really
bioengineering (at least in the media-popular mind).
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