@albertcardona @NicoleCRust @neurobongo @xaq
It’s a very fair critique, and some of the PR does us more harm than good. For example, we don’t have a map of 100,000 cells that tells us little, we have an EM volume spanning 100,000 cells that was at the edge of what was possible at the time that still requires a lot of (manual or automated) proofreading to turn into analyzable data.
The full set of initial science papers from the mm3 volume is almost ready to submit, but our existing work has started to reveal details about the nature of connectivity in a cell-type-specific manner. For example, a 2022 eLife paper (Dorkenwald et al.) shows that you see a bimodal distribution of synapse sizes on layer 2/3 cells, but _only_ if you restrict analysis to synapses from other layer 2/3 cells. Similarly, we found a variety of factors that could predict how much chandelier input a pyramidal cell would receive. These data suggest that neurons have type-specific rules for connectivity and plasticity that are hard to see if you can’t separate connections out this way.
More recently (as in Monday), I posted a manuscript to the biorxiv describing inhibitory connectivity across a column of visual cortex that shows that inhibitory selectivity (at least at the cell type level) is the norm, not the exception. In particular, we find selective inhibition not only for each excitatory projection class (IT, NP, ET, and CT) as well as sublaminar groups of IT neurons. This suggests a network of precise inhibition across cortex. We also find a new class of disinhibitory specialist interneuronal that targets basket cells, unlike the well-described VIP->SST circuit. This opens up a host of follow up questions, and we hope that using patch-seq data to link EM data to transcriptomics will help make this experimentally possible.
Ultimately, I think we’re still in the early days of getting the data out and finding the science in it. This is very much like in Drosophila, where the first studies at the whole-brain scale were highly focused. But I believe it will go the same way, becoming a way to study large scale structure at single cell resolution, complementing single lab studies, and helping answer unexpected questions. For example, one of my colleagues noticed that oligodendrocyte precursor cells in the EM looked like they were doing phagocytosis, which wasn’t a known function for them, and she just published a nice PNAS paper (Buchanan et al) about it.
The party of free speech, folks!
Florida teachers told to remove books from classroom libraries or risk felony prosecution
https://popular.info/p/florida-teachers-told-to-remove-books
@albertcardona Oh, you mean in the month view! No idea, other than exit and re-enter.
@albertcardona On a specific device and tool or in the general world? In the Android widget of Samsung's calendar app (and the Google equivalent), today is the top, I like that.
Wondering whose platform lock-in is at fault when #Google's Account manager consistently crashes #GMail on #Samsung's flagship tablet when I try to add my employer's #Microsoft Office 365 account via #Okta authentication? Is it #Google, #Samsung, or #Microsoft? Or all of them? What a terrible mess!
This whole essay is so damn good that it was hard to pick a pull-quote.
"This is enshittification: surpluses are first directed to users; then, once they're locked in, surpluses go to suppliers; then once they're locked in, the surplus is handed to shareholders and the platform becomes a useless pile of shit."
@Mbussonn Best via:
$ git config --global pull.rebase true
Here's a picture of Mt #taranaki seen from an apparently dangerous cliff of Mt #ruapehu #newzealand. That's 0.5 the width of the whole country.
Here's a picture of #horokoau and #aroaki (Mts Tasman and Cook) seen from #lakematheson #newzealand past sunset. I should have brought bug spray for less distraction.
Here's a picture of the #tasmanrivervalley #newzealand with a Taramea on the left so it cannot be confused. Bummer to learn that #jacindaardern is stepping down, she's been great.
@albertcardona True, but can't we bring them all? I would like to keep dreaming...
THREAD: Falls are a major public health problem — a top-20 cause of death in the US. Wonder what scientists are doing about that? @yunluzhu & colleagues in my lab developed powerful new tech to understand balance & evaluate therapeutics.
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.01.07.523102v1
Want to know more / watch neat movies? 1/9
#mastopiece #neuroscience #balance #drosophila #celegans #zebrafish
Thx for boosting (we’re trying to outdo that other place)!
Here's a picture from #hahei #newzealand. They also have hot springs in the sand but it gets a bit crowded there.
@markkitti Last mile problems are normal if you move into the burbs 😉. I am just glad that #IAD isn't the last mile problem any more.
@markkitti Glorious! Starting in 2022, I can take the train to the airport, like basically everywhere else! This feels shockingly normal 😀 (and I am really glad that it finally works).
RT @_JosephWatson@twitter.com
Today we’re sharing a deep-learning method for protein design called RoseTTAFold Diffusion. With minimal input, it turns prompts (“create a molecule that binds X”) into new proteins that fold and function in the lab. We’ve tested 100s already.
PDF here: https://www.bakerlab.org/2022/11/30/diffusion-model-for-protein-design/
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/_JosephWatson/status/1598409457855496192
@StearnsLab I believe that both recalling and synthesizing information are skills that future students will have to acquire. I don't have a lot of teaching experience, but isn't everything we learn in institutional education something that somebody or something can already do better? Everything my kids learn in school can be done by computers or by me. They still need to learn it so they can do creative things at some point and live a non-boring life.
I have spent a lot of time explaining to Russians and Ukrainians that Telegram is not a safe communications channel (I even wrote a Telegram Harm Reduction Guide) but people still use Telegram and they still tell me they do so because it's "safe" and "secure."
I hope that at the very least Telegram users in eastern Ukraine will stop.
https://www.pwnallthethings.com/p/russia-is-spying-on-telegram-chats
scalable image analysis, ML, software design at HHMI Janelia