• The workings of the human body? (ted.com)
  • In particular, the artist recalls his experience of visiting Eva, a gigantic 45-meter installation of a reclining woman constructed in fiberglass and foam that traveled around Brazil in the 1980s, in which visitors could go inside to learn about the workings of the human body. (designboom.com)
  • NASA is particularly interested in investigating how the body reacts to long-duration spaceflight as the agency plans for extended missions on the Moon and Mars. (nasa.gov)
  • Scientists are still trying to figure out how the human body responds to long-duration spaceflight. (astronomy.com)
  • Scientists have discovered three bodies on an Indonesian island which provide an insight into the movements of early humans, thousands of years ago. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • Artists partnered with researchers and scientists to explore the biological and cellular make-up of the human body, as part of an ambitious programme of public engagement activities with the Human Cell Atlas project. (sanger.ac.uk)
  • Artists have worked with scientists and researchers from the Human Cell Atlas and with local communities across the UK, to offer an entirely new perspective on their pioneering scientific work. (sanger.ac.uk)
  • Putting together these kinds of calculations, the researchers produce a ratio for microbial to human cells for the average man of 1.3:1, with a wide uncertainty. (nature.com)
  • The researchers made the extraordinary claim that the corpses, recovered from a mine in Cusco, Peru, had a genetic composition 30 per cent removed from that of human beings. (gulfnews.com)
  • By combining art and science, the exhibition explores the human body on a cellular level and is inspired by the pioneering scientific work of the Human Cell Atlas research initiative, which includes researchers from the Wellcome Sanger Institute and EMBL's European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI). (sanger.ac.uk)
  • Researchers said that within days, his body showed notable differences to his twin and his baseline rate from before he left Earth. (astronomy.com)
  • Researchers looked at the Kellys' blood to check their DNA, but they also studied their urine and stool samples, which offer a better look at the gut microbiome, as well as system-wide changes in their bodies. (astronomy.com)
  • If you're knowledgeable in the area of biology, you'll be able to recognize that all humans have these organs. (geekalerts.com)
  • Students can learn the names and functions of each part of the brain, build a human skeleton from a friendly pile of bones, organize the digestive organs, or take a narrated tour of the human heart. (educationworld.com)
  • Then have each student draw (or create using construction paper) as many body organs as possible within the outline. (educationworld.com)
  • Human Body: Pushing the Limits is a four part television documentary series which was filmed in various locations across the globe and premiered on the Discovery Channel on March 2, 2008 in North America. (wikipedia.org)
  • The second episode of Human Body: Pushing the Limits - "Strength" was nominated for an Emmy at the 60th annual Academy of Television Arts & Sciences awards in 2008. (wikipedia.org)
  • In the new situation of practically non-existent premature mortality and technologically developed complex societies medical practice will devote less attention to "saving lives"--preventing premature deaths--and more to enhancing capacities of our biological organisms and providing for maintenance of the bodies beyond their biological limits established by evolution. (nih.gov)
  • Supersoldier is a term often used to describe a soldier that operates beyond normal human limits or abilities. (abovetopsecret.com)
  • The body's computer system computes and sends throughout the body billions of bits of information, information that controls every action, right down to the flicker of an eyelid. (creation.com)
  • E.S.T. The show covers how the body reacts under extreme stress like being stuck in a cave or running away from forest fires. (wikipedia.org)
  • The human body has a dynamic framework of bone and cartilage called the skeleton. (creation.com)
  • The human skeleton is flexible, with hinges and joints that were made to move. (creation.com)
  • The Virtual Body includes interesting information about the brain, the digestive system, the heart, and the skeleton in a highly interactive format. (educationworld.com)
  • In a climate where it is more difficult for LGBTI people and activists to be heard, you also have a role to play in educating, encouraging acceptance and pushing for reforms to address systemic human rights violations against LGBTI people. (coe.int)
  • The UN has advised countries around the world to create national human rights institutions with powers to provide independent advice to the government and parliament on all matters relating to the promotion and protection of human rights, to investigate human rights violations, to issue recommendations, and to ensure conformity of national laws with international human rights instruments and their effective implementation. (hrw.org)
  • Your tax deductible gift can help stop human rights violations and save lives around the world. (hrw.org)
  • Our own biological glimmer is a thousand times less intense than the sensitivity of the human eye so our only hope of detecting it is with sophisticated instruments. (discovermagazine.com)
  • If culture shows an explicit tendency to cover the nakedness of the human body, it certainly does so not only for climatic reasons, but also in relation to the process of growth of man's personal sensitivity. (ewtn.com)
  • The process of refining personal human sensitivity is certainly a factor and fruit of culture. (ewtn.com)
  • Provide younger students with a copy of Teaching Master 1: Body Parts and ask them to complete the word search. (educationworld.com)
  • more than half the bones in the human body are in the hands and feet? (educationworld.com)
  • The bodies, found across three burial sites, form part of an excavation and analysis of 50,000 bones unearthed along the south coast of Indonesia's Alor Island, which is north of Timor Leste. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • Bones give our body structure and enable us to stand, walk and move. (howstuffworks.com)
  • So what else is your skeletal responsible for and exactly how many bones are in the human body anyway? (howstuffworks.com)
  • The government's consistent failure to respond to human rights groups' concerns about the proposed Human Rights Institution of Turkey signals that the protection and promotion of human rights in Turkey is not a government priority," Sinclair-Webb said. (hrw.org)
  • A storm arrives, 'not of breath and air but of cells and their signals', revealing a disturbance in the body, an immune system in overdrive. (sanger.ac.uk)
  • Electrical energy signals in the body. (wisc-online.com)
  • When political leaders are failing in their responsibility to promote equality and human rights, national legislation and human rights structures, such as yours, are the safety-net to ensure protection. (coe.int)
  • At the same time, I regularly hear that, in some countries, national human rights structures, including Equality Bodies, do not deal with discrimination against LGBTI people. (coe.int)
  • I thought the sale of human body parts was illegal in the US except for medical and research purposes? (geekalerts.com)
  • It even repairs the body when parts are damaged by accident or disease. (creation.com)
  • There they can tour the human body for an overview of the major body systems, stopping frequently along the way to delve more deeply into each system's individual parts. (educationworld.com)
  • Continue the activity above by asking students to put the body parts in ABC order. (educationworld.com)
  • The human body is an amazing structure made up of many fascinating parts and systems. (howstuffworks.com)
  • An infrared camera showed that some of the hottest body parts like the side of the neck above the collarbones give off very few photons, and the total light emissions didn't match variations in body temperature in any meaningful way. (discovermagazine.com)
  • His photos reveal that our faces are the shiniest parts of our bodies, with our mouths and cheeks glowing particularly brightly. (discovermagazine.com)
  • But how would you feel if you discovered that your food or body lotion contained human body parts? (listverse.com)
  • More products containing human secretions and body parts are still being developed today. (listverse.com)
  • You will probably not be ingesting food made from human body parts without knowing about it. (listverse.com)
  • The act of using human body parts as medicine reached its height between the 16th and 17th centuries and started to die down in the 18th century. (listverse.com)
  • Jonathas de Andrade has transformed the Brazil Pavilion at the Venice Art Biennale 2022 into a playful installation composed of larger-than-life parts of the human body. (designboom.com)
  • Titled 'With the Heart Coming Out of the Mouth', the exhibition takes its cues from popular Brazilian expressions that refer metaphorically to parts of the human body such as 'knot in the throat', 'in one ear and out the other', and 'eye of the storm' among others. (designboom.com)
  • In between, they encounter sculptural representations of an eye on the floor, a bitten, severed tongue, hands in the fire, and a warm back, among other parts of the human body. (designboom.com)
  • All of them translate popular idioms related to parts of the body that describe feelings and situations. (designboom.com)
  • Yet these isolated and objectified parts also transcend the body, when another structural element of this exhibition comes into play: language. (designboom.com)
  • The discovery of human remains in the region began in 2014, when teams from ANU and Indonesia's Gadjah Mada University, found a 12,000-year-old human skull buried along with several fish hooks . (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • The bodies shown were roughly humanoid in shape -- a retractable neck and long skull show 'characteristics' more 'typical of birds', the Daily Mail quoted the Mexican El Pais newspaper as saying. (gulfnews.com)
  • One such believer was the English King Charles II, who drank a mixture of ground human skull and alcohol to maintain his health. (listverse.com)
  • Increased risk of cancer and degenerative diseases , such as heart disease and cataracts, have been observed in human populations exposed to radiation on Earth. (nasa.gov)
  • Society is at the threshold of a new age when machines will no longer be separate, lifeless mechanisms, but will instead be intimate extensions of the human body. (nist.gov)
  • The UN Human Rights Office and the mechanisms we support work on a wide range of human rights topics. (ohchr.org)
  • The human body has numerous defense mechanisms to keep the airway free and clear of extraneous matter. (medscape.com)
  • However, none of these mechanisms is perfect, and foreign bodies frequently lodge in the airways of children. (medscape.com)
  • Human Rights groups in Turkey, among them the Human Rights Association, Mazlum Der, Helsinki Citizens' Assembly, Amnesty International Turkey, and the Human Rights Foundation of Turkey have repeatedly offered detailed commentary on the law and attempted to engage actively in the process of drafting the law. (hrw.org)
  • Yes, the body is a wonder machine, despite the defects from genetic copying errors (mutations) that have accumulated since the Fall of man brought on the Curse (Genesis 3). (creation.com)
  • Studies are beginning to understand the genetic diversity of peoples within the region, which lead researcher Dr Samper Carro says can be further informed by the discovery of these bodies. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • Blood carries food and oxygen to every part of the body. (creation.com)
  • It can be that some Equality Bodies lack the legislative basis enabling them to act, notably as regards gender identity, sex characteristics or hate speech. (coe.int)
  • In each of these dimensions-and in a different way in each one-the human body loses that deeply subjective meaning of the gift. (ewtn.com)
  • However it is impossible not to perceive that from the point of view of the ethos of the body, deeply understood, a problem arises here. (ewtn.com)
  • Few biblical interpreters have delved as deeply into the science of the human brain as Joel Green. (bakerpublishinggroup.com)
  • Beyond the need of shame, that is, of the privacy of one's own body (on which the biblical sources give such precise information in Genesis 3), there is a deeper norm. (ewtn.com)
  • In this outstanding work, the author provides a scholarly and thoroughly biblical analysis of human personhood in dialogue with the neurosciences. (bakerpublishinggroup.com)
  • The Regional Representative for Europe of the UN Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights, Jan Jarab, has emphasized to the Turkish government that, in accordance with the Paris Principles, the independence of a national human rights institution must be understood as independence from the executive, not as the attainment of an administrative status within the executive. (hrw.org)
  • In this way, in the processes of human culture understood in the wide sense, we note-even in man's state of hereditary sinfulness-quite an explicit continuity of the nuptial meaning of the body in its masculinity and femininity. (ewtn.com)
  • For more than 50 years, NASA's Human Research Program (HRP) has studied what happens to the human body in space. (nasa.gov)
  • A 'reference man' (one who is 70 kilograms, 20-30 years old and 1.7 metres tall) contains on average about 30 trillion human cells and 39 trillion bacteria, say Ron Milo and Ron Sender at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, and Shai Fuchs at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Canada. (nature.com)
  • There have been great advances in the past years in Europe to protect the human rights of LGBTI people. (coe.int)
  • More bodies were found when the team returned to the site four years later. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • Mexico City: A UFO expert has presented two allegedly 'non human' bodies with three fingered hands and feet and said to be 1,000 years old, at the Mexican Congress, the media reported. (gulfnews.com)
  • Carbon dating by the National Autonomous University of Mexico(UNAM) found the bodies, pictured with three-fingered hands and feet, no teeth and stereoscopic vision, were more than 1,000 years old. (gulfnews.com)
  • More foreign body aspirations occur in children younger than 3 years than in other age groups, with a peak between the first and second birthdays. (medscape.com)
  • Generally, this occurs around age 5 years, with most foreign body aspirations occurring in children younger than 3 years. (medscape.com)
  • The human body is the most fascinating and fantastic machine in existence. (educationworld.com)
  • Here he draws upon that learning in conversation with Scripture to put forth a fresh picture of human existence, one that makes sense from both perspectives. (bakerpublishinggroup.com)
  • I always assumed the bodies were donated by the people (like how people decide to donate their own bodies to science after they die), but it looks like there is plenty of evidence that recently came out that many of these bodies are from Chinese prisoners. (geekalerts.com)
  • It combines art and science to explore the body on a cellular level and is inspired by the Human Cell Atlas. (sanger.ac.uk)
  • Exploring what Scripture and theology teach about issues such as being in the divine image, the importance of community, sin, free will, salvation, and the afterlife, Joel Green argues that a dualistic view of the human person is inconsistent with both science and Scripture. (bakerpublishinggroup.com)
  • This "Human Body" peeps beneath our skin to show us how the body and the brain undergo fantastic changes - and mind-blowing feats - just to keep us active every day. (wikipedia.org)
  • And in just one human brain there is probably more wiring, more electrical circuitry, than in all the computer systems of the world put together. (creation.com)
  • Every second of the day, blood bustles through your body, bound for your brain, toes and everything in between. (howstuffworks.com)
  • The montage film draws upon surrealist layering and juxtapositions to explore the intertwining narratives of the research of the Human Cell Atlas. (sanger.ac.uk)
  • It questions how we might see our body and data after death and aims to create debate about how we want to see ourselves and the critical role we play in scientific discovery. (sanger.ac.uk)
  • The One Cell At A Time exhibition presents, explores and communicates the intricacies of the scientific research of the Human Cell Atlas in a unique way. (sanger.ac.uk)
  • However, the Justice and Development Party government has refused to revise in substance a draft law establishing the institution, despite repeated criticism from domestic and international human rights groups, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, and the European Commission over its lack of independence from the government. (hrw.org)
  • It is opportune to recall here the series of analyses carried out in connection with Christ's reference to the beginning, and subsequently to the reference he made to the human heart, in the Sermon on the Mount. (ewtn.com)
  • The human heart is a source of _____________ that, even at a few meters away, is detectable by modern scientific instruments. (wisc-online.com)
  • Let us now reflect-with regard to Christ's words in the Sermon on the Mount-on the problem of the ethos of the human body in works of artistic culture. (ewtn.com)
  • The artistic objectivation [ sic ] of the human body in its male and female nakedness, in order to make it first of all a model and then the subject of the work of art, is always to a certain extent a going outside of this original and, for the body, its specific configuration of interpersonal donation. (ewtn.com)
  • In a way, that constitutes an uprooting of the human body from this configuration and its transfer to the dimension of artistic objectivation-the specific dimension of the work of art or of the reproduction typical of the film and photographic techniques of our time. (ewtn.com)
  • Istanbul) - The Turkish government should withdraw its draft law for the establishment of a national human rights institution because the proposed body would lack impartiality and independence from government, Human Rights Watch said today. (hrw.org)
  • The United Nations has a well-developed set of standards for national human rights institutions, known as the Paris Principles. (hrw.org)
  • It is made up of four episodes that all concentrate on certain aspects of the human body. (wikipedia.org)
  • Many people unwittingly turned cannibal after ingesting food items made from human remains. (listverse.com)
  • This happens in such a way that those who look at the body, assimilate or even, in a way, take possession of what evidently exists, of what in fact should exist essentially at the level of a gift, made by the person to the person, not just in the image but in the living man. (ewtn.com)
  • Oftentimes students of the Bible and students of the neurosciences tell radically different and ultimately irreconcilable stories about human nature--what we are, who we are, and what we're made for. (bakerpublishinggroup.com)
  • In the 21st century human life has been profoundly changed by developments in sanitation, medical interventions and public health measures. (nih.gov)
  • Human body has evolved in the past adaptations to hunting-gathering, and later, agricultural ways of life. (nih.gov)
  • Such a merging of body and machine will not only improve the quality of life for disabled people, but will allow persons with normal physiologies to experience augmented capabilities -- cognitively, emotionally and physically. (nist.gov)
  • He does not shy away from hard questions, especially those about life and death, body and soul. (bakerpublishinggroup.com)
  • It's often said that the bacteria and other microbes in our body outnumber our own cells by about ten to one. (nature.com)
  • The ratio between resident microbes and human cells is more likely to be one-to-one, they calculate. (nature.com)
  • The numbers are similar enough that each defecation event may flip the ratio to favour human cells over bacteria," they delicately conclude in a manuscript posted to the preprint server bioRxiv 1 . (nature.com)
  • In 2014, molecular biologist Judah Rosner at the US National Institutes of Health at Bethesda, expressed his doubts about the 10:1 claim, noting that there were very few good estimates for the numbers of human and microbial cells in the body. (nature.com)
  • Resting cells in the body have more potassium ions inside than sodium ions. (wisc-online.com)
  • It is good that we all now have a better estimate to quote," says Peer Bork, a bioinformatician at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory in Heidelberg, Germany, who works on the human and other complex microbiomes. (nature.com)
  • The body has a chemical plant far more intricate than any plant that man has ever built. (creation.com)
  • Chemical reactions within your body, besides liberating energy and producing heat, are also emitting small numbers of photons , elementary particles of light. (discovermagazine.com)
  • The anonymous nakedness of the man-object contrasts with the progress of the truly human culture of morals. (ewtn.com)
  • The role of advances in nanotechnology, information technology, neuroscience and biotechnology is discussed in the context of mind and body enhancements. (nih.gov)
  • Of course, the human mind is at least as fragile than the body. (astronomy.com)
  • The flawed approach to the law and its content is at odds with the purpose of establishing such a body. (hrw.org)
  • Aspirated foreign body (backing to an earring) lodged in the right main stem bronchus. (medscape.com)
  • The studies are expected to shed light on how the body adapts to living in the spaceflight environment for various longer time periods, which will be pivotal for future deep space missions. (nasa.gov)
  • Kobayashi thinks that this rhythm is driven by an internal body clock, for he managed to break the cycle and suppress the volunteers' bodily glows by keeping them awake in constant light and disrupting their sleep patterns. (discovermagazine.com)
  • Arrange students into groups and ask each group to create a diagram of a major body system. (educationworld.com)
  • It provides a new way to create nano-based systems with what we hope will provide a novel way to someday engineer tissues in the human body. (sciencedaily.com)
  • All of the molecules and elements in our bodies have the potential to create electrical impulses. (wisc-online.com)
  • Provide students with a list of scientific words and terms related to the human body and ask then to find the definition for each word. (educationworld.com)
  • However, information for most body systems is only accessible by clicking "low band width" on the welcome page, and the information in that format is completely text-based. (educationworld.com)
  • It is a groundbreaking documentary which uses state-of-the-art CGI technology and hi-tech camera work to examine each individuals physical ordeals in vivid details both inside and outside of the human body. (wikipedia.org)
  • Others just used regular products that contained human remains without being aware of it. (listverse.com)
  • An irregular heartbeat is inefficient and deprives the body of blood. (howstuffworks.com)
  • What type of electrolyte acts as a buffer to maintain the normal levels of acidity (pH) in blood and other fluids in the body? (wisc-online.com)
  • The human body-the naked human body in the whole truth of its masculinity and femininity-has the meaning of a gift of the person to the person. (ewtn.com)
  • It introduces you to people from around the world who have pushed their bodies to the absolute limit. (wikipedia.org)
  • Together with the adoption of laws guaranteeing equal human rights, we have also witnessed profound societal changes in many countries. (coe.int)
  • However, foreign bodies have been found in the airways of individuals of all ages and sizes. (medscape.com)
  • Students will discover how each body system works and find out how each body part contributes to the functioning of the whole body. (educationworld.com)
  • The fact that this problem is raised does not mean that the human body, in its nakedness, cannot become a subject of works of art-but only that this problem is not purely aesthetic, nor morally indifferent. (ewtn.com)