Moving Science SHOWREEL from first year
Posted onThis animation shows a ‘rhapsody’ of the animation projects, Moving Science has made througout the first year. It includes many different, interesting, areas of biology.
New scientific animations
This animation shows a ‘rhapsody’ of the animation projects, Moving Science has made througout the first year. It includes many different, interesting, areas of biology.
This animation was made in collaboration with Helene Halkjær Jensen from Aalborg University (MTO Group, Department of Chemistry and Bioscience) and descibes how mutations in the protein Calmodulin can cause arrhythmias (unstable heart rhythm) in patients.
Next in my series of spectacular brains was the Sperm Whale (or the nicer name KASKELOT, as its name is in danish and swedish). This intelligent predator has the largest brain of all species on earth. Not even the blue whale, which is the largest species on earth, can beat it (this is due to […]
I have started a series of animations named “Spectacular brains of the vertebrates”! This will show vertebrate brains that are spectacular in different ways. For instance in shape, size, enlarged regions, density, function…. The first animal in this series was a hammerhead shark, which has a very strangely shaped brain due to its very odd […]
This animation was made for the NGO named AI Scope and describes the life-cycle of the malaria parasite – and how the software from AI Scope can improve malaria diagnosis and make it available for more people.
I made this video on LinkedIn in april 2018 to present myself and my mission about wanting to learn to make cool animations of science. The message was that I wanted projects to work on – without payment – to build my portfolio. I had a lot of positive interest and got a lot of […]
I have made this animation/video for MonTa Biosciences about the therapeutic mechanism of immunotherapy against cancer. The animation can also be seen on the Monta homepage: www.montabiosciences.dk
I have made two animations for use in this special lecture: The first animation about Thymus-maturation of T-cells around 4 min. The second animation about CAR immunotherapy around 11.50 min.