Cellular Organelles
This video represents a shift into scientific visualization, where the challenge lies in balancing biological data with clear, digestible motion design. For a 10th-grade Biology curriculum, the production focused on transforming static textbook diagrams into a living, three-dimensional narrative of the human cell.
Production of the Human Cell in After Effects
The production in Adobe After Effects utilized a "layered discovery" approach, where the complexity of the cell is revealed incrementally to prevent cognitive overwhelm.
To move beyond flat 2D diagrams, I used a combination of Z-space depth and subtle "floating" expressions to simulate a fluid, cytoplasmic environment. This gives the organelles a sense of suspension that mirrors the biological reality of the cell.
• Vector-to-motion workflow: Starting with precise assets from Adobe Illustrator, I converted each organelle into shape layers to allow for non-destructive scaling and intricate internal animations (For example, the "shipping" movement of the Golgi apparatus).
From a learning standpoint, the video unfolds through scaffolded complexity: The video begins with the "whole" cell before diving into specific "parts." This "Global-to-Local" instructional strategy helps students build a mental map of the cell before they are asked to memorize specific organelle functions.