Integrative Human Biochemistry
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Date
2015Author
Da Poian, Andrea T.
Castanho, Miguel A. R. B.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Traditional lecture classes in biological sciences are being challenged by modern forms
of communication. Modern communication tends to be more visual and less interpretative
in nature. In lectures, the didactics are changing vastly and rapidly; the deductive
power of mathematics is complemented by the intuitive clarity of movie simulations,
even if the fi rst is fully embedded in the scientifi c method and the latter are mere artistic
confi gurations of a faintly perceived reality. It is a general trend in modern societies
that the most effective communication is more condensed and focused, contextualizes
the information, and is disseminated across multiple media. Textbooks do not escape
this reality. A modern scientifi c textbook to be effective should be a means of communication
that needs to address specifi c issues of interest, place these issues in a broader
interdisciplinary context, and make use of modern visualization tools that represent
reality within the state of the art available in scientifi c research.