Jellyfish Central

Jellyfish Central is my ongoing collection of articles, research and thoughts on  jellyfish and invertebrate.

Jellyfish captured my attention and imagination in the mid-1980s, about midway through my fifty-year career in vision research. At the time I was chief of the Laboratory of Molecular and Developmental BiologyNational Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland. My specialty was gene expression in the eyes of vertebrates.

While reading a new book on invertebrate vision, I learned that complex jellyfish eye looked like a variation of the highly evolved human eye!

It appeared to me that Jellyfish eyes seemed much more than evolutionary stepping-stones to vertebrate eyes; they were small jewels.

I suddenly, impulsively, wanted to study jellyfish eyes. Stepping into the strange universe of jellyfish resonated with the excitement I had in choosing a career in biology many years earlier. But where to start?…

8 06, 2015

“Gives a chilling warning that is sure to stimulate debate”

By |2020-01-07T21:14:36-05:00June 8th, 2015|Categories: Jellyfish Have Eyes!, Reviews & Testimonials|Tags: , |0 Comments

“The time is the near future when an economically stressed government threatens academic freedom of basic scientists. In ‘Jellyfish Have Eyes,’ an award-winning scientist pays a heavy price for his breakthrough discoveries that jellyfish interact and visualize evolution. Piatigorsky’s imaginative account that Dr. Ricardo Sztein’s path from discovery to condemnation gives a chilling warning that is sure to stimulate debate on the role of government in dictating the direction of scientific research.”

–Joseph Horwitz, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor, UCLA School of Medicine

9 04, 2015

My Novel, a Review, and the Narrative Nature of Science

By |2016-06-16T16:39:17-04:00April 9th, 2015|Categories: Blog, Jellyfish Have Eyes!, Science|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

Lucky me! My novel, "Jellyfish Have Eyes," was well reviewed by Joel Shurkin (thank you!) in the National Academy of Sciences website and its journal, Proceedings of the National Academy - a rare case of a first novel not lost in the vast wasteland out there. But what I think is important is that he [...]

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