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3317

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  • Geometry of a Circle V1

    • Image
    • Text Document
    • PDF
    • 2.5D Tactile Graphic
    Multiple Diagrams illustrating four basic concepts of a circle. Terms include: circumference (distance around the whole circle), radius (distance from the center of the circle to the outer edge, diameter (the distance from the opposite point of the circle), and chord (the distance from any two points on the circle's edge).

    Diagram showing the geometry and terms used to describe a circle. Design modalities for the image include braille with and without labels, print with and without labels in greyscale, color, and texture.

    (Source: Benetech)

  • Geometry of a Circle V2

    • Image
    • Text Document
    • PDF
    • 2.5D Tactile Graphic
    Single Diagram illustrating four basic concepts of a circle. Terms include: circumference (distance around the whole circle), radius (distance from the center of the circle to the outer edge, diameter (the distance from the opposite point of the circle), and chord (the distance from any two points on the circle's edge).

    Diagram showing the geometry and terms used to describe a circle. Design modalities for the image include braille with and without labels, print with and without labels in greyscale, color, and texture.

    (Source: Benetech)

  • The Amoeba sisters present the heading, characteristics of life, with a D N A strand extending from left to right, below it.

    All living organisms share several key characteristics or functions. When combined, these characteristics serve to define life. In this episode, Petunia and Pinky discuss several of the characteristics of life. Part of "The Amoeba Sisters" series. Please note: This title contains discussions on sexual reproduction.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Underwater plants with small fish swimming through them. Caption: Flatworms were around for a long time.

    Shows the structure, behavior, and life cycles of planarians and their free-living relatives (class Turbellaria). Illustrates the bizarre life cycles of flukes (class Trematoda) and tapeworms (class Cestoda) with detailed animations and revealing images of these parasites in action.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Microscopic view of brick-like cells with red nuclei. Caption: this is a one-cell-think section of a growing onion root-

    Part of the "Inside the Living Cell" series. Provides an overview of the different kinds of cells, emphasizing the fact that all cells have a common organizational structure and carry out similar biochemical processes. Presents the discovery of cells, cell structures, organelle function, cell varieties, and the chemistry of life.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Cartoon character talking to a small flying insect. Caption: (Johan) Some animals' habitats are rivers, lakes, and ponds.

    Part of the animated "Johan, the Young Scientist" series. Housebound during a rainy day, Johan goes to ScienScape where it also rains. Johan, Ani, and Moki set out to find where the rainwater ends up. This leads them from gutters to drains to rivers. They soon learn that all living beings need water to survive.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Hand holding a leaf. Almost entirely camouflaged on the leaf is an insect. Caption: with lots of moss on tree trunks and leaves

    Ten 10-minute programs explore temperate and tropical habitats and their abundant diversity of life. Tape one: compares temperate and tropical forests, their habitats, the effects of rain on them, and shows how size can generate great diversity. Tape two: uses butterflies to represent species diversity, compares how people relate to temperate and tropical environments, explores humans' impact on diversity, and investigates issues of threatened and endangered species.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • A person speaking. Illustration of a lion and a flying insect. Natural Selection. Caption: says that those individuals with beneficial traits,

    From fossil evidence, it appears that life may have existed on Earth as early as 3.5 billion years ago. This suggests that life must have evolved sometime during Earth's tumultuous first billion years. How did life evolve? What did early forms of life look like? Topics covered include protocells, endosymbiosis, prokaryotes, eukaryotes, evolution, heredity, variation, natural selection, genetic drift, and gene flow. Part of the "Biology" series.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Cross section of a cell showing a ribbon-like structure. Caption: with the inner membrane folded, increasing its surface area

    Updates the five kingdoms classification scheme with the latest understanding of life's organization based on DNA, fossil, and biochemical evidence, reorganizing all life into three great branches: Archaea, Bacteria, and Eucarya. Shows concise animations and superb microscope footage of primitive cells.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • A skeletal ribcage with lungs inside. Caption: and the air rushes in.

    Explains why the body needs regular supplies of air and how these get to the body. The camera follows the process of breathing through the ultra-thin membrane of the lung into the blood, showing how the varying demand for oxygen is met by the exchange of information between the brain and the chest muscles and how the body rids itself of carbon dioxide.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Streaks of light from silver to light brown in an irregular pattern. Caption: One gene plays an important role for the hormone vasopressin.

    At the twilight of an active life, Anna is now bedridden due to a serious fall. What makes the elderly--even those who are in full possession of their mental and physical faculties--more prone to falling than younger people? As this program demonstrates, the answer lies not in the body or the brain alone, but in their interconnection. Exploring Anna's past dreams of becoming a ballerina, the film shows how complex physical motion, such as dancing or even typing, requires sophisticated coordination between the body's neural, muscular, and skeletal systems. How aging affects such coordination and how new artificial limb technology enables movement are running themes in the program.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Illustration of a whale swimming underwater. Music note.

    What happens when a whale dies? This short piece explores the concept of decay, and the role decay plays in giving life to other organisms.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Person sitting in front of a computer screen. Caption: are able to solve the puzzle after a night's rest.

    Anna has built a successful business from the ground up, and upon retirement, she leaves the company to her employees, not to her son. What does that decision tell us about Anna's psychology and about the development of the human brain over a lifetime? Explores the emotional and neurological elements of learning, explaining how the brain processes and stores experiences and prepares for future decision-making. Employing real-to-life dramatizations, Anna's journey from innocent teenager to philosophical retiree--and the changes that take place in her cortex, hippocampus, and neural synapses as she faces and overcomes challenges--are all depicted. In addition, several influential brain experiments from the past decade are described.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Young woman's face in the foreground, older woman's face in the background. Caption: Most people lose weight after the age of 75:

    Anna was born with a sweet tooth, and as a young woman, she created a successful business using it. Her delicious jams and jellies gave pleasure to many, but did they also cause harm? Explores the way the human body processes food and how its long-term growth and development are shaped by eating habits. Illustrating cellular aging and its relationship to AGEs, or advanced glycation end products, a connection is drawn between the bacteria an infant must consume to build a healthy immune system and the bacteria that consume the body at death. As Anna's life draws to a close, viewers will understand that "dust to dust" is a cycle in which humans take an active part--every time they sit down to a meal.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • A mountain covered in snow. Caption: (male narrator) They exist on every continent on earth except Australia.

    Glaciers are one of the main driving forces affecting Earth's climate and landscape. These massive sheets of ice are constantly moving and changing, and warming temperatures are causing most glaciers to recede. Located in some of the most inhospitable areas of the planet, scientists are venturing to glaciers to study them and looking for clues from past and present changes in climate. Part of the "Glacier Series."

    (Source: DCMP)

  • A spherical organism only partly in focus. Long leg-like protrusions with bulges at the end. Caption: These colonial rotifers secrete a jellylike substance

    The diversity of rotifers is stunning, and many different species are overviewed. Planktonic rotifers have special adaptations for open water life. Nematodes (roundworms) include a number of important human parasites, seldom seen but easily found. Tree moss, leaf litter, and compost piles swarm with nematodes.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Illustration of human body. Caption: Enzymes, antibodies, even our muscles are all protein based.

    With support from the National Science Foundation, chemist Kent Kirshenbaum and his team at New York University are engineering molecules to mimic the shapes, structures, and functions of natural proteins. The ultimate goal of this biomimetic chemistry research is to develop a reliable way to build synthetic proteins that can be put to work at the industrial scale. Part of the "Science Nation" series.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Illustration of drops of water with faces. Caption: Look at this, Hanna.

    The children learn about the transformation of water. They watch as the droplets change into rain, vapor, and even a tear on Olli's cheek. Part of the "My Little Planet" series.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • A cell being viewed under a microscope. Caption: you can clearly see many of the larger structures

    Demonstrates techniques for using a student microscope to achieve spectacular images. Emphasizes correct lighting procedures and the techniques required for viewing living cells.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Snake slithering down a thin branch. Caption: looking for snakes and frogs and salamander

    Host Emily Graslie travels to an unstudied rain forest. While there, she helps a team of scientists document the reptiles and amphibians they find during night excursions. Part of "The Brain Scoop" series.

    (Source: DCMP)

Collections

7

Showing collections 1 to 7 of 7

  • Chemistry

    • Video
    • Image
    • 2.5D Tactile Graphic
    • PDF
    • Text Document
    • Simulation

    A collection of Chemistry related resources

    A collection containing 67 resources, curated by Benetech

  • Animals

    • Video

    Resources to teach younger students about animals

    A collection containing 58 resources, curated by DIAGRAM Center

  • Biology

    • Video
    • Image
    • Text Document
    • PDF
    • 2.5D Tactile Graphic
    • 3D Model
    • Audio File

    Biology related concepts

    A collection containing 59 resources, curated by Benetech

  • Elements

    • Image
    • Text Document
    • 3D Model

    3D models and images of the entire periodic table of elements

    A collection containing 118 resources, curated by Library Lyna

  • Vision

    • Image
    • Text Document
    • PDF
    • 2.5D Tactile Graphic
    • Video

    Resources related to vision

    A collection containing 12 resources, curated by Charles LaPierre

  • Anatomy

    • Video
    • Image
    • PDF
    • Text Document
    • 2.5D Tactile Graphic

    Collection of anatomy resources

    A collection containing 21 resources, curated by Benetech

  • PhET Simulations

    • Simulation

    A collection of simulations from PhET.

    A collection containing 15 resources, curated by Charles LaPierre