Computer Graphics Laboratory

The Computer Graphics Laboratory is a department of the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), dedicated to developing software and Web-based resources for the visualization and analysis of molecular structure at scales ranging from the atomic to the supramolecular. Set up by him in 1969 at Princeton University, but moved to UCSF in 1976, it was there where Dr. Robert Langridge worked in 1981, when he was approached in person by Jim Veilleux, supervisor of the Graphics Group, to do the molecular first sequence of the Genesis Demo. As such, both Langridge and the Computer Graphics Laboratory were credited in.

The department, which has no further motion picture credits, still exists, but has been renamed to Resource for Biocomputing, Visualization, and Informatics (RBVI).