If you see
a glassed in research lab, you know you're in the NRC.
Not exact matches
He joined Google
in 2007, where he led the program to develop its self - driving car, and then founded Google X, the ultra-secretive
research lab behind Google
Glass and other
research projects so far - out that Google calls them «moon shots.»
The facility would have been split into
labs for the state on one side and
labs for biotech
research on the other, with a large
glass atrium
in the middle.
But their extraordinary, federally funded
research really took off with a simple, fortuitous accident with the kittens
in their
lab: somebody pushed a
glass slide too far on an overhead projector.
Looking through a microscope, Youngnam Jin — a postdoctoral fellow
in Randy Peterson's
lab at Massachusetts General Hospital's Cardiovascular
Research Center — arranges one - celled zebrafish embryos, each about 10 minutes old, into rows of 20, spinning them with a micro spatula to turn their nuclei toward the ultrathin
glass needle of a micro-injection device.
Set
in a business world of long white corridors and
glass walls and
research labs, it's a Freudian - Jungian - Felliniesque sci - fi thriller, and an outright challenge to American viewers, who may,
in the face of its whirligig complexity, feel almost pea - brained.
In his
research lab, Dr. Gottman discovered that successful couples create a culture of goodwill and purposefully strive to see each other through rose - colored
glasses.