·Ö×Ó»úеÈË£º×êÑнü¿öºÍÕ°Íû

2014.09.18

Ͷ¸å£ºÁõ»ª²¿ÃÅ£ºÍÆËã»ú¹¤³ÌÓë¿ÆÑ§Ñ§Ôºä¯ÀÀ´ÎÊý£º

»î¶¯ÐÅÏ¢

¹¦·ò£º 2014Äê09ÔÂ23ÈÕ 10:00

µØÖ·£º У±¾²¿¶«ÇøÍÆËã»ú´óÂ¥801ÊÒ

±¨ ¸æ ÈË: Ó×éL¹ÈÃ÷Ñå ½ÌÊÚ ¡¾ÈÕ±¾¶«¾©¹¤Òµ´óѧ¡¿
»ã±¨¹¦·ò: 2014Äê9ÔÂ23ÈÕ£¨ÐÇÆÚ¶þ£©ÉÏÎç10µã-11µã
»ã±¨µØÖ·: У±¾²¿¶«ÇøÍÆËã»ú´óÂ¥801ÊÒ
Ñû Çë ÈË: º«Ô½ÐË ²©Ê¿
Ö÷°ìµ¥Ôª£ºÍÆËã»úѧԺ
Abstract£º
The main challenge for the construction of amoeba-type molecular robots is system integration of molecular components such as molecular sensors and molecular controller as well as molecular actuators in a molecular container. Giant liposome is one of the most promising molecular containers for amoeba-type molecular robots. Molecular sensors include photo-reactors and magnetic field reactors as well as DNA channels for small molecules. DNA logic gates are intensively studied as a molecular controller. A microtubule-kinesin based actuator and an actin filament-myosin based actuator are currently studied.
Biography£º
Professor, Department of Computational Intelligence and Systems Science, Tokyo Institute of Technology Principle Investigator of Amoeba-type Molecular Robotics, A Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Areas: Molecular Robotics Visiting Researcher, National Institute of Informatics, Japan
¡¾ÍøÕ¾µØÍ¼¡¿