Gotta check these out!
Robust, scalable, and informative clustering for diverse biological networks
https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-023-03062-0
@floe
Maybe you have part of your answer already in this preprint from last year?
"We reran an abstract summarization task from the literature on Amazon Mechanical Turk and, through a combination of keystroke detection and synthetic text classification, estimate that 33-46% of crowd workers used LLMs when completing the task"
https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.07899
Tasks, and the reputation management of participants on different platforms, may be influential here
Hey, #rstats champions! Sometimes you might want to consider reordering 🔀 your boxplot groups to more clearly illustrate the differences between them. You can easily achieve this with the `reorder` function within your aesthetic mappings. Check out my blog for a full working example and code.
🔗 https://lpembleton.rbind.io/ramblings/R/#order-a-boxplot-for-improved-across-axis-comparisions
Do you want to identify the neighbours of your favourite cells but are unsure where to start?
Check out our Primer, just out in @Dev_journal , for an overview of synthetic neighbour-labelling systems and of how they can be used in developmental settings.
Huge thanks to @CellySally, Tamina Lebek and Guillaume Blin for a real fun writing experience!
#DevBio #SynBio #StemCells #Cell #Cells #Development #SyntheticBiology #Synthetic #Biology #Science #ScienceMastodon
@ionica This story has a rather *excellent* graph, which should get some sort of graph award 🙂
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-01-09/magpies-swoop-bald-more-often-survey-finds/103297520
European research peeps: did you know that most EU & some non-EU countries have a Research Office in Brussels to help with things like Horizon EU coordination? And that many of these offices have meeting rooms you can borrow? This can be really handy if you need a central location for a consortium meeting for a Horizon Europe grant (whether at application stage or post-award). Handy & can minimise flights as very accessible by train. Would recommend! #HorizonEurope #ConsortiumBuilding #Research
This is a @xieyihui
appreciation post
#rstats, please join me in sponsoring @xieyihui
on @GitHub
https://github.com/sponsors/yihui
(Context: https://yihui.org/en/2024/01/bye-rstudio/)
1/n 🧵(or shall I say 🧶)
‘Unthinkable’: Marie Curie’s Paris lab saved from the bulldozers … for now https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2024/jan/06/unthinkable-marie-curies-paris-lab-saved-from-the-bulldozers-for-now Via @guardian
Rachel Hayes-Harb discusses her approach to student collaboration and group assessment in the following webinar;
https://youtu.be/5ExuqTkNNuU
For the specific coverage of your questions, start from about 9.30 in
Absolutely devastating news. I would not have accomplished what I have accomplished in the last decade without Yihui's work. If you've ever encountered a website, report, or book built with R in recent memory, you have Yihui to thank.
https://yihui.org/en/2024/01/bye-rstudio/
Until he gets a new position, he's looking for sponsorship: https://github.com/sponsors/yihui
Exobasidium is a parasitic fungi that lives in plants as an endoparasite. It galls flowers changing the scale and morphology of flowers and other plant structures in surprising ways.
I just found out they exist and I'm shocked, fascinated and horrified.
They were mentioned in passing in this Crime Pays video (I have NOT been binge watching CPBD looking for ant cameos, what kind of weirdo would do something that? Not me. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UaUMcaKgkw8)
Citations show gender bias — and the reasons are surprising https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-03474-9
Gender bias in paper citations is less common among younger scientists, but it still plays a part in making women’s research less visible
Irregular sleep-wake patterns are associated with a higher risk of overall mortality, and also mortality from cancers and cardiovascular disease. #Epidemiology #Cancer https://elifesciences.org/articles/94131?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=organic_insights
This paper, showing how violins went from O-shaped holes to F-shaped holes, is one of my favorite examples when I discuss "technological trajectories" and search as tinkering with students. The amazing thing is that this all happened without theory, all is just trial and error and slowly optimizing the air-resonance power over the centuries. The full paper is worth reading/skimming if one has only a slight interest in innovation, music/acoustics or both: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspa.2014.0905
Do you do group #assessments for your #highered courses? How do you deal with "free-riders" who don't engage with the rest of the group?
At the moment I'm thinking of
- having students include a statement of who has done what in their final product
- having a couple of sessions (beginning of term and mid-term) where each group presents a plan first and a short progress report later, which clearly states student contributions
- stress to the students that part of the idea for a group assessment is for them to organise and work in a group. I'm a bit torn on this one as it seems unfair to put the onus for those who don't engage on those who do... but hey that's what happens in real life...
Any other ideas?
Senior lecturer at the Zhejiang-Edinburgh Joint Institute (ZJE) and Edinburgh University.
Undergraduate Programme Coordinator, Biomedical Informatics at ZJE.
I teach #imageanalysis & #dataanalysis with #RStats & #python. I study #heterogeneity in #pituitary (and other) cells.
I'm also very interested in #reproducibility and #openscience.