pág. 5
#Biotech: the need for biotechnology communication
Lluís Montoliu i José (coord.)
págs. 6-7
Communication about genetic editing: CRISPR, between optimism and false expectations
págs. 8-15
Biotechnology and communication in democratic societies: old challenges for a new era
págs. 16-21
págs. 22-29
Beyond the CSI effect: the keys to good forensic genetics communication
págs. 30-37
Biotechnology, communication and the public: keys to delve into the social perception of science
págs. 38-45
On analogical knowledge: metaphors in biotechnology discourse
págs. 46-51
In praise of life: the dynamic concept of biodiversity
Francesc Mesquita Joanes (coord.)
págs. 52-53
págs. 54-61
Beyond counting species: a new way to look at biodiversity
Cristina Llopis Belenguer, María Isabel Blasco Costa, Juan Antonio Balbuena
págs. 62-67
Life in extreme conditions: the paradox of Antarctic marine biodiversity
Stefano Ambroso, Janire Salazar, Josep Maria Gili Sardà, Rebeca Zapata Guardiola
págs. 68-75
págs. 76-81
págs. 82-89
Natural enemies and biodiversity: the double-edged sword of trophic interactions
págs. 90-99
Defining nature: competing perspectives: between nativism and ecological novelty
págs. 100-107
págs. 108-115
Interlinked: machines and humans facing the 10101 century
Carme Torras (coord.), Ramón López de Mántaras (coord.)
págs. 116-117
Towards artificial intelligence: advances, challenges, and risks
págs. 118-125
When the state of the art is ahead of the state of understanding: unintuitive properties of deep neural networks
págs. 126-133
The human-computer connection: an overview of brain-computer interfaces
págs. 134-141
Robots that look like humans: a brief look into humanoid robotics
págs. 142-151
Robotics and automation for societal good: global South challenges and technology-policy considerations
págs. 152-161
Social networks and robot companions: technology, ethics, and science fiction
págs. 162-169
© 2001-2024 Fundación Dialnet · Todos los derechos reservados