Messages de Rogue Scholar

language
ChimieAnglais
Publié in Jeremy Monat, PhD

This is an update of a Recap retrosynthetic tree blog post to programmatically annotate the diagram. Previously, I exported the drawing from the RDKit and manually annotated the it with another program. After reading Greg Landrum’s RKDit blog post Drawing on drawings, I wanted to automate annotating the tree.

Artes VisualesSin CategoríaSciences humainesEspagnol
Publié in BLOG ATARRAYA
Auteur Atarraya

Youko Marian Horiuchi Beltrán, DR © Ilustración digital Ciudad de México, Mayo 2021 Sitio de la autora Instagram Esta es una reproducción digital, con fines de divulgación, de una obra original proporcionada por su autor o propietario. Todos los derechos están reservados por la artista.

BilletsHistória Da PsicologiaPsicologiaHistoria Da PsicologiaPhilosophie, éthique et sciences des religionsPortugais
Publié in áskēsis
Auteur Marcio Luiz Miotto

Em 1957 o Bulletin de Psychologie publicou uma recensão da produção dos dez anos pregressos, contendo tudo o que foi produzido em Psicologia e áreas afins (sem esquecer de colocar a definição do que...

AcademiaWritingGenerative AILangues et littératureAnglais
Publié in The Ideophone
Auteur Mark Dingemanse

I recently came across a blog included in Rogue Scholar that was producing a barrage of posts along the lines of “Animals that start with [letter]”. They included the inspiring “Animals that start with P”, the highly original “Animals that start with H” and of course the intriguing “Animals that start with M”. Here is the introduction to that one: Any opening like this sets off my LLM alarm bells.

National SecurityBiotechnologyAutres sciences techniquesAnglais
Publié in The Connected Ideas Project
Auteur Alexander Titus

At first, no one noticed the grain fields dying. The war wasn't declared with a missile launch. It wasn't announced with tanks, drones, or hackers tapping on keyboards. It started in the soil. The first reports came from a logistics base near Lubbock. A strange blight on the stored wheat stocks, brown lesions on the kernels, a chemical smell no one could quite identify.

PapersBiologieAnglais
Publié in Paired Ends
Auteur Stephen Turner

This week’s recap highlights new methods in genetic epidemiology, mostly centered around genomic data sharing and privacy-preserving methods: a short commentary on genomic data sharing highlighting how new challenges complicate large-scale data sharing practices, a privacy-preserving method for QTL mapping, privacy-preserving methods for federated biobank-scale GWAS analysis, a Nextflow pipeline for polygenic score QC and construction, and new

Stinkin' Every Thing That's Not A SauropodStinkin' InvertebratesStinkin' PlantsSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais

I realize that the titular statement is open to misinterpretation so let me head that off at the pass: I’m not saying this prescriptively, like you should learn anatomy to become a better person (you should learn anatomy because it’s accessible and it rules), or that knowing anatomy makes people better. I’m also not saying this distributively, like anatomists are better people than non-anatomists.