Klein, TobiasViola, IvanMindek, PeterMadeiras Pereira, João and Raidou, Renata Georgia2019-06-022019-06-022019978-3-03868-088-8https://doi.org/10.2312/eurp.20191149https://diglib.eg.org:443/handle/10.2312/eurp20191149Fibrous structures are ubiquitous in cell biology and play essential structural and functional roles in the life cycle of a cell. They are long polymers, such as DNA carrying genetic information, or filaments forming the cytoskeleton, crucial for cell division and maintaining the cell shape. In order to disseminate new findings of such structures to peers or a general audience, animated 3D models of these structures have to be created, as they are too small to be imaged with microscopes. However, this is a tedious task carried out by scientific animators, who manually create expressive visual representations of biological phenomena. In this work, we present a novel concept which simplifies the process of animating multi-scale procedural models of biological fibrous structures. In contrast with existing work in the domain of molecular visualization, our approach can also capture dynamics, which are important to show when communicating biological processes.Computing methodologiesProcedural animationA Multi-Scale Animation Framework for Biological Fibrous Structures10.2312/eurp.2019114973-75