<p>Explain how you have determined your work is responsible and good for the world.</p>
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<p>Please see the <ahref="https://competition.igem.org/judging/medals">2024 Medals Page</a> for more information.</p>
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<h4>Best Integrated Human Practices</h4>
<p>How does your project affect society and how does society influence the direction of your project? How might ethical considerations and stakeholder input guide your project purpose and design and the experiments you conduct in the lab? How does this feedback enter into the process of your work all through the iGEM competition? Document a thoughtful and creative approach to exploring these questions and how your project evolved in the process to compete for this award!</p>
<p>To compete for the Best Integrated Human Practices prize, select the prize on the <ahref="https://competition.igem.org/deliverables/judging-form">judging form</a> and describe your work on this page.</p>
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<p>Please see the <ahref="https://competition.igem.org/judging/awards">2024 Awards Page</a> for more information.</p>
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<h2>Overview</h2>
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<p>At iGEM we believe societal considerations should be upfront and integrated throughout the design and execution of synthetic biology projects. “Human Practices” refers to iGEM teams' efforts to actively consider how the world affects their work and their work affects the world. Through your Human Practices activities, your team should demonstrate how you have thought carefully and creatively about whether your project is responsible and good for the world. We invite you to explore issues relating (but not limited) to the ethics, safety, security, and sustainability of your project, and to show how this exploration feeds back into your project purpose, design, and execution.</p>
<p>Please note you can compete for the Silver Medal criterion #2 and the Best Integrated Human Practices prize with this page.</p>
<p>For more information, please see the <ahref="https://responsibility.igem.org/human-practices/what-is-human-practices">Human Practices Hub</a>.</p>
<p>On this page, your team should document all of your Human Practices work and activities. You should write about the Human Practices topics you considered in your project, document any activities you conducted to explore these topics (such as engaging with experts and stakeholders), describe why you took a particular approach (including referencing any work you built upon), and explain if and how you integrated takeaways from your Human Practices work back into your project purpose, design and/or execution.</p>
<p>Measurements are critical to scientific communication and advancement. Well-reported measurements are the only way to show whether hardware is functioning correctly, whether data are reliable, and whether a result is actually important. There is a high value in identifying appropriate targets for measurement, collecting precise measurements, and reporting results clearly and with appropriate units. Document your careful measurement efforts and you could win this award!</p>
<p>To compete for the Best Measurement prize, select the prize on the <ahref="https://competition.igem.org/deliverables/judging-form">judging form</a> and describe your work on this page.</p>
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<p>Please see the <ahref="https://competition.igem.org/judging/awards">2024 Awards Page</a> for more information.</p>
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<h2>Overview</h2>
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<p> If you've done excellent work in measurement, you should consider nominating your team for this special prize. Synthetic Biology needs great measurement approaches for characterizing parts, and efficient new methods for characterizing many parts at once. If you've done something exciting in the area of Measurement, describe it here!</p>
<li>Clearly and objectively describe the results of your work.</li>
<li>Future plans for the project.</li>
<li>Considerations for replicating the experiments.</li>
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<h2>Describe what your results mean</h2>
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<li>Interpretation of the results obtained during your project. Don't just show a plot/figure/graph/other, tell us what you think the data means. This is an important part of your project that the judges will look for.</li>
<li>Show data, but remember <b>all measurement and characterization data must also be on the Part's Main Page on the <ahref="https://parts.igem.org/Main_Page">Registry</a>.</b> Otherwise these data will not be in consideration for any medals or part awards!</li>
<li>Consider including an analysis summary section to discuss what your results mean. Judges like to read what you think your data means, beyond all the data you have acquired during your project.</li>
<iframesrc="https://static.igem.wiki/teams/5342/documents/plan-b/results-for-mrna-compressed.pdf"title="Results for mRNA"allow="fullscreen"style="height: 1200px; width: 800px; max-height:100%; max-width:100%"></iframe>
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<h2>Project Achievements</h2>
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<p>You can also include a list of bullet points (and links) of the successes and failures you have had over your summer. It is a quick reference page for the judges to see what you achieved during your summer.</p>
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<li>A list of linked bullet points of the successful results during your project</li>
<li>A list of linked bullet points of the unsuccessful results during your project and what you learned from them. This is about being scientifically honest. If you worked on an area for a long time with no success, tell us so we know where you put your effort. Furthermore, you can still impress the judges by thoughtfully discussing what went wrong and how you might change things. </li>