Watch: Frontiers of imaging science

Since the invention of the microscope in the 16th century, humankind has delved into the inner workings of the body through the use of imaging technology. In a little more than 100 years, scientific advancements in imaging have led to major breakthroughs that help scientific researchers and medical professionals all over the world see inside the human body in greater detail and with greater clarity.

Although there have been significant advances in biomedical imaging, we are far from the ultimate goal: to visualize life’s processes at the molecular, cellular, and system level, in real time, in the living organism, and in a minimally invasive manner. That’s why the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative launched the Frontiers of Imaging—an effort to support innovations in imaging technology that could be transformative for medical applications and for understanding life at the cellular level.

Watch the video above to learn more about how pushing the frontiers of this technology will improve scientists’ ability to address important biological questions about health and disease.

News

  • Nature: Move over, AlphaFold: open source model predicts shape of 1 billion proteins

    The new open-source atlas, generated by an AI tool called ESMFold2, vastly increases the known protein universe.

  • Biohub releases a world model of protein biology

    Biohub’s open models map the protein universe and design functional binders with therapeutic-level affinity in the lab.

  • Biology’s blind spot

    Inflammation drives nearly every major disease, yet we’ve never been able to directly watch it progress in living tissue. These researchers are building the technologies to change that.