'The goal must be to ensure that people of color have fair access to the full array of medical treatments and resources available, said Dr. David Jones, a Harvard professor who has been a leading proponent of removing race from clinical algorithms.
But critics of the Apgar score’s reliance on skin color fear that it is resulting in extra medical treatment being heaped on babies of color who are healthy, potentially sending them to intensive care unnecessarily.'
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/13/health/apgar-score-black-infants.html
Goethe on the psychology of color and emotion https://t.co/UsbEdMw85V
'Apesar da retórica popular, a União Nacional (RN) opôs-se ao aumento dos salários médios e mínimo, optando por propor a redução das contribuições para a Segurança Social, e defendeu menos regras ambientais. Como nos anos 30, a chegada dos fascistas ao poder teria o amparo do dinheiro.'
https://expresso.pt/opiniao/2024-07-11-a-desdemocratizacao-da-democracia-65133d3f
July 14, 2024- 🇫🇷 “Covid restrictions brought back at Tour de France” “Masks must now be worn by everyone, including organisers, guests and journalists, who may be "in contact with the riders and members of the cycling teams" before and after the stages, said organisers Amaury Sport Organisation (ASO).” - https://www.rte.ie/news/coronavirus/2024/0714/1459820-covid-tour-de-france/
'Under the publication conditions presented above, we claim that the current publication system can distort Open Science, by presenting a vision of Open Science that fails to consider the need for quality inherent in scientific production. We especially argue that scientific publishers, but also institutions, tend to confound Open Science and Open Access, underfunding the quality control of data while overfunding Open Access, without sufficiently consulting the researcher community on global scientific objectives. We call for greater cautiousness when dealing with the promotion of Open Science, and a stronger reliance on Open Science practices by and for researchers instead of by institutions and publishers and for publishers.'
https://open-research-europe.ec.europa.eu/articles/4-127/v1
'Twenty-nine different Car-T treatments for autoimmune diseases, ranging from the muscle inflammation condition myositis to multiple sclerosis, are now being tested in clinical trials by drugmakers including Novartis and Bristol Myers Squibb'
#Immunology #Autoimmunity #CARTcells
https://www.ft.com/content/a974f4c1-bb8a-4a1b-9d88-a2cf14be5c6e
HI #acadamicchatter #UKHE folks, wondering if anyone has a good idea to deal with #ChatGPT dilemma on course work assessment ( need to be essay based)? We are reviewing our final year UG assessment, and cannot quite decide to ban or allow ChatGPT? Do we have clear detection tools now for ChatGPT?
This one of Goldman Sachs' top analysts: "This is not a matter of just some tweaks being required here and there; despite its expensive price tag, the technology is nowhere near where it needs to be in order to be useful for even such basic tasks."
Goldman Sachs ran an experiment where they had AI do a task and also did a task manually and found that it cost six times as much to have AI do the same task as humans. Cites "illegible and nonsensical results"
'Under the publication conditions presented above, we claim that the current publication system can distort Open Science, by presenting a vision of Open Science that fails to consider the need for quality inherent in scientific production. We especially argue that scientific publishers, but also institutions, tend to confound Open Science and Open Access, underfunding the quality control of data while overfunding Open Access, without sufficiently consulting the researcher community on global scientific objectives. We call for greater cautiousness when dealing with the promotion of Open Science, and a stronger reliance on Open Science practices by and for researchers instead of by institutions and publishers and for publishers.'
https://open-research-europe.ec.europa.eu/articles/4-127/v1
"US tech giants export their toughest and most dangerous jobs overseas. The work is mentally and emotionally draining. We scrub Facebook, TikTok and Instagram to ensure these important platforms do not become awash with hate speech and incitement to violence. We label images and text to train generative AI tools like OpenAI. Our work involves watching murder and beheadings, child abuse and rape, pornography and bestiality for less than $2 per hour."
https://www.foxglove.org.uk/open-letter-to-president-biden-from-tech-workers-in-kenya/
' Japanese disaster food — which also goes by the names bōsaishoku (disaster-prevention food), bichikushoku (food reserves), hozonshoku (preserved food), and hijōshoku (emergency food) — is wonderfully diverse. There’s dehydrated mushroom risotto, freeze-dried chicken stew, and canned mackerel in miso and sesame. Ready-to-eat food packets range from Japanese classics like nikujaga (beef and potato stew), oden (fish cakes and vegetables in savory-sweet broth), and curry to more globally recognizable dishes like pasta carbonara and beef stroganoff. Some meals come with a built-in heating unit. One company claims that its meals will keep for 25 years. For dessert, there’s Toyo Foods’ canned matcha cheesecake, Izameshi’s anko mochi (pounded rice cakes with sweet red bean paste), or Imuraya’s yōkan (sweet jellied red bean paste), which won an award from the Disaster Prevention Safety Association.'
https://www.eater.com/24194897/japan-saigaishoku-disaster-food-emergency-rations
“I know you’re trying to skirt around it,” says Benjamín Labatut when I put to him that his books concern people of unworldly intelligence working on problems that are maximally deep, “but the best way to sum it up is: ‘Why am I interested in mad scientists?’” Fair play. There’s no getting away from it: that’s exactly what his richly satisfying, deeply researched books are about.'
'Male and female humans are born with the same number of cardiomyocytes — the predominant cardiac cell type by mass; however, in adulthood, males have a significantly smaller proportion of cardiomyocytes. This is thought to be due to testosterone-induced apoptosis in the male heart, although differences in cardiomyocyte-regenerative capacity may also contribute.'
https://www.jci.org/articles/view/180074
Molecular profile, source and lineage restriction of stem cells in an annelid regeneration model https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.07.09.602635v1?med=mas
A latitudinal gradient of reference genomes https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.07.09.602657v1?med=mas
'In June I was helping to manage a community outbreak of whooping cough when the whole town ran out of clarithromycin suspension, the recommended antibiotic for the acute phase in children. None could be found, and I was reduced to asking the parents of affected children to get a pestle and mortar to grind up tablets and hide the powder in yoghurt. A few months ago we had an outbreak of scarlet fever and did the same with tablets of penicillin. The pestle and mortar is one of the oldest symbols of the pharmaceutical profession; it’s an unexpected twist in the spiralling problems of the health service that in 2024 we’re having to recommend returning to it.'
https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n14/gavin-francis/short-cuts
This is one of the best 'best of' lists of science fiction books I've seen. It does a pretty good job of balancing more recent books with older 'classics', and makes some good guesses as to which contemporary books will stand the test of time. While everyone will find a favorite author or two missing from Esquire's list (Ken Macleod and Joanna Russ for me), pretty much everything on the list is worth reading.
#ScienceFiction #ReadingLists #BestOfLists
https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/books/g39358054/best-sci-fi-books/
“100 years of Drosophila research and its impact on vertebrate neuroscience: a history lesson for the future”, by Hugo Bellen et al. 2010.
https://www.nature.com/articles/nrn2839
Would be amusing to update with all the recent connectomics work in fly.
I've worked on all of science, from B cells to T cells.
https://fellowsherpa.com