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Single-cell analyses comprise a multitude of analytical methods that share a common feature, namely the focus on individual cells. This is in contrast to previous methods that provided summarized data for cell clusters, groups of cells, tissues and organs. The new field offers huge potential not only for basic research, but also for medical and biotechnological applications, as it opens up new levels in the context-related and personal interpretation of biological interconnections. This brochure on single-cell analysis provides an overview on the new possibilities from the viewpoint of developmental biology, biomedicine and bioinformatics, but also addresses possible social im-plications and consequences.
Based on the social challenges of our time, this statement addresses key aspects of the question of how the work of tomorrow can be redesigned. On behalf of the Standing Committee of the German National Academy of Sciences and under the leadership of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, the authors have intensively examined the current structural change in the world of work. They suggest that the concept of work should be interpreted broadly and that gainful employment should be considered in its interplay with other forms of activity. Non-market-related activities such as citizen work, care work and political work and their interplay are also taken into consideration. The shift in emphasis from a "work-oriented society" to an "activity-oriented society" highlights the opportunities that open up for people, the economy and society if these activities are equally recognized.