Contents contributed and discussions participated by Bill Fulkerson
A large-scale tool to investigate the function of autism spectrum disorder genes - 0 views
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The "Perturb-Seq" method, published in the journal Science, is an efficient way to identify potential biological mechanisms underlying autism spectrum disorder, which is an important first step toward developing treatments for the complex disease. The method is also broadly applicable to other organs, enabling scientists to better understand a wide range of disease and normal processes.
Proteins Unfolded - 0 views
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Artificial intelligence (AI) has solved one of biology's grand challenges: predicting how proteins curl up from a linear chain of amino acids into 3D shapes that allow them to carry out life's tasks. Today, leading structural biologists and organizers of a biennial protein folding competition announced the achievement by researchers at DeepMind, a U.K.-based AI company. They say the DeepMind method will have far-reaching effects, among them dramatically speeding the creation of new medications.
A New AI Study May Explain Why Deep Learning Works | Psychology Today - 0 views
Multiple wheat genomes reveal global variation in modern breeding | Nature - 0 views
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Wheat is a staple food across all parts of the world and is one of the most widely grown and consumed crops7. As the human population continues to grow, wheat production must increase by more than 50% over current levels by 2050 to meet demand7. Efforts to increase wheat production may be aided by comprehensive genomic resources from global breeding programs to identify within-species allelic diversity and determine the best allele combinations to produce superior cultivars2,8.
Transportation and logistics. - 0 views
Phenomenal World | Development, Growth, Power - 0 views
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In anticipation of his forthcoming article on Social Democracy in PSL Quarterly, and a Phenomenal World series on the topic, we begin this interview by discussing alternatives to financial liberalization, before turning to a discussion on the future of welfare politics, development strategy, and contemporary models of economic growth.
How humans use objects in novel ways to solve problems - 0 views
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Human beings are naturally creative tool users. When we need to drive in a nail but don't have a hammer, we easily realize that we can use a heavy, flat object like a rock in its place. When our table is shaky, we quickly find that we can put a stack of paper under the table leg to stabilize it. But while these actions seem so natural to us, they are believed to be a hallmark of great intelligence-only a few other species use objects in novel ways to solve their problems, and none can do so as flexibly as people. What provides us with these powerful capabilities for using objects in this way?
A Vaccine Won't End the Pandemic in Rural America | Foreign Affairs - 0 views
Vergil Den - Blog - The Cashless Society and Its Enemies - 0 views
How Venture Capitalists Are Deforming Capitalism | The New Yorker - 0 views
infection data - 0 views
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