Edinburgh’s virtual cadaver - one of the first of its kind in the UK - will be used this year in teaching. The Anatomage Table allows medical and anatomy students to investigate the human body by virtually dissecting it. The table, which shows life-sized male and female bodies, has been created from CT scans allowing the body to be seen from front to back, side to side and upside down. Unlike the dissection of a real cadaver, in which body parts can only be removed, students can add or remove organs, veins, arteries, nerves or tissue by touching the table thereby enabling them to see how one part relates to another. Film In this short film, we take a look at the cutting edge tool with the School of Biomedical Sciences’s Gordon Findlater, Professor of Translational Anatomy. Special article found - identified by: 1.149477 Photo slideshow See more spectacular and detailed views of the Anatomage Table in our slideshow. Special article found - identified by: 1.149484 To view this photo gallery you may need Adobe Flash Player installed on your computer. You can also view the photographs on our Flickr channel: Anatomage Table photo gallery on Flickr Related Links College of Medicine & Veterinary Medicine Anatomy at Edinburgh College of Medicine & Veterinary Medicine-postgraduate College of Medicine & Veterinary Medicine-undergraduate School of Biomedical Sciences Publication date 18 Jun, 2015