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INTERACTIVE ILUSTRATION FOR PHOTOSYNTHESIS TEACHING
Author(s) -
Márcio R. Pereira,
Fernanda C. Dórea,
Consuelo M. R. de Lima,
Mariana S. Castro,
Wagner Fontes
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
revista de ensino de bioquímica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2318-8790
DOI - 10.16923/reb.v2i2.144
Subject(s) - animation , computer science , scheme (mathematics) , multimedia , computer graphics (images) , human–computer interaction , mathematics , mathematical analysis
Computational resources became the major tool in the challenge of making high education moreeasy and motivating. Complex Biochemical pathways can now be presented in interactive and three-dimensional animations. One of the most complex (detailed) and interesting metabolic pathway thatstudents must understand in biochemical courses is photosynthesis. The light-dependent reactionsare of special interest since they involve many dierent kinds of mechanisms, as light absorptionby membrane complexes, proteins movement inside membranes, reactions of water hydrolysis, andelectrons ow; making it dicult to understand by static bi-dimensional representations.The resources of animation and ActionScript programming were used to make an interactive ani-mation of photosynthesis, which at some times even simulates three-dimensionality. The animationbegins with a leaf and progressively zooms in, until we have a scheme of a tylakoyd membrane, whereeach of the dierent steps of the pathway can be clicked to reveal a more detailed scheme of it. Whereappropriate, the energy graphs are shown side by side with the reactions. The electron is representedwith a face, so it can be shown to be stressing while going up in the energy graphs. Finally, there isa simplied version of the whole pathway, to illustrate how it all goes together.The objective is to help professors on teaching the subject in regular classes, since currently allthe explanations are omitted. In a future version, texts will be added to each step so it can beself-explicative to the students, helping them even on home or on-line learning.

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