'Claro que pode ser visto como positivo que tenha acontecido assim. Quando se investiga um crime não devemos torcer pelo prevaricador, ou seja, torcer por que tenha feito tudo bem e não tenha deixado vestígios da sua atuação. Mais vale torcer pelo sucesso da investigação e por algum deslize, por parte de quem prevaricou, que a favoreça. Nesse aspecto, e com as devidas adaptações, este caso foi um sucesso.'
https://www.publico.pt/2023/03/08/opiniao/opiniao/tap-imoral-ilegal-irresponsavel-2041504
RT @AlePrigio
Our review on modeling mitochondrial diseases is out! We discuss available models including iPSCs, organoids, and new mtDNA editing approaches. Thanks to reviewers and editor for great input @emboreports
http://doi.org/10.15252/embr.202255678
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Follow @ASAPbio_ on Instagram and @ASAPbio at Mastodon, and don't miss any updates about #preprints and #OpenScience!
Have you turned your poster into a preprint? From examples by @PracheeAC & others, writing up a poster seems to increase visibility, citability, & feedback. How did it work out for you? Please share links to your posters-turned-preprints below!
#PreprintYourPoster
Bioinformatic scientist @emoryuniversity
Tim Read’s research group at Emory is seeking a postdoctoral bioinformatics scientist to work on metagenomics and comparative genomics of bacteria
https://jobrxiv.org/job/emory-univeristy-27778-bioinformatic-scientist/?feed_id=40008
#ScienceJobs #job
Atlanta #United...
https://jobrxiv.org/job/emory-univeristy-27778-bioinformatic-scientist/?feed_id=40008
Hello world! Elon Musk picking a twitter fight with Icelandic philanthropist and man of the year 2022 Haraldur Thorleifsson ended up being the final push that we needed, so now we are here on Mastodon. We don't know how any of this works, but follow us for posts on vision science, cognitive psychology, cognitive science, cognitive neuroscience, and stupid memes.
Postdoc: new therapeutic strategies against pancreatic cancer. @idis_research
If you feel like digging in the inner #science worlds of #pancreatic #cancer, then join us in beautiful #Santiago de Compostela as a #postdoc!!
@medium Here is a comprehensive practical beginner’s guide on working with Mastodon that I wrote, complete with 25 screenshots, a listening suggestion, and a table of contents. It’s a long piece that is best listened to at 0.8 x speed, for listeners.
https://medium.com/@CelineL/a-rookies-guide-to-using-mastodon-4efd79862faf
STING directly recruits #WIPI2 for #autophagosome formation during STING-induced #autophagy - autophagy-dependent clearance of cytoplasmic DNA attenuating #cGAS-STING signaling.
'Lovell-Badge, though, mostly worries that genome editing will become the preserve of the wealthy, given that current therapies are estimated to cost upwards of six figures per patient. “The question of equitable access is a huge one,” Lovell-Badge tells me. “How do we get costs down? It’s a challenge for scientists, for economists and for everyone.”
https://www.ft.com/content/8b65ddfb-b4a3-444c-93ca-73dfb881399e
and basal bodies :)
---
RT @DutcherLab
The third edition of the Chlamydomonas Sourcebook is finally out. Great chapters on all things cilia and motility https://t.co/tPZxz4o3U4
https://twitter.com/DutcherLab/status/1633447870278909952
Illustration by Madalena Parreira for an interview I did with @matthewcobb a few years ago (a really interesting conversation about how he began writing non-technical books, "Then I suddenly came up with this idea of rather than write the biography, why not concentrate on this huge row that broke out in 1672 over who was the first to discover that women have eggs?")
"This series of prints was created between 2017 and 2021 and consists of several aquatints of stages, doors, caves or forests, where figures have been inserted through the technique of chine-collé, and colours added through viscosity printing.
The same plate receives different figures or cut-outs (found in old cards, magazines or books) which affect the perception of the space through their different graphic qualities and scale."
#Prints #Print #Printmaking #handmade #ArtMastodon #Aquatint
Last year I spoke with Marco Trizzino for @ReviewCommons
Trizzino came from a wet lab background before adopting computational approaches. This was his training tip for students & postdocs who want to learn bioinformatics:
"R is really important. Whichever field you work in, it doesn’t matter if you are a neuroscientist or a cancer biologist. There are a lot of resources to learn R, Coursera courses, workshops, and all the universities now have an R class. I would really recommend to everyone to learn R."
Halfway through our data collection, we also realized our flies were contaminated with a cryptic nora virus infection. Given how large an impact it made on our results, we felt it was important to highlights this in Fig. 1 to draw attention to the potential for this cryptic virus to affect aging studies (and likely other phenotypes!?).
Our very preliminary [post-hoc] results also hint at a possible host genetic background effect of nora virus also... 🦠 🔬
#microbiome #immunity #drosophila #aging
'The Minerva results hint at something that some researchers have long suspected: that training larger LLMs, and feeding them more data, could give them the ability, through pattern-recognition alone, to solve tasks that are supposed to require reasoning. If so, some AI researchers say that this ‘bigger is better’ strategy might provide a path to powerful AI.'
We welcome Sir Paul Nurse's landscape review on how the UK can enhance its R&D capability and agree that this can only happen if there is a focus on good scientific culture and research integrity.
Final Report: https://gov.uk/government/publications/research-development-and-innovation-organisational-landscape-an-independent-review
If you're confused about death and decay, this #preprint is for you
"Here we provide heuristics as well as simple models that outline when the Williams prediction holds, why there is a ‘null model’ where extrinsic mortality does not change the evolution of senescence at all, and why it is also possible to expect the opposite of William’s prediction, where increased extrinsic mortality favours slower senescence."
I've worked on all of science, from B cells to T cells.
https://fellowsherpa.com