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The University of York found that even the smartest AI models could not match human visual processing
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
Professor James Elder, co-author of a study published at the University of York, said that deep convolutional neural networks (DCNNs) do not use configured shape perception to observe objects the way humans do, which can be dangerous in real-world AI applications.
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Beyond AlphaFold: Artificial intelligence creates new proteins
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
Image source: Institute of Protein Design Medicine, University of WashingtonOver the past two years, AI/machine learning tools have stunned the world with the accuracy of protein structure predictions and have led the research field to produce some meaningful results.
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South China Botanical Garden has made progress in the synthesis of plant sterols and the phytohormone brassolaster sterols
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
In recent years, the Crop Nutrition Efficiency and Molecular Breeding Research Group of the South China Botanical Garden of the Chinese Academy of Sciences has systematically studied the function of the members of the rice CYP51 family gene.
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Cancer Cell: A new mechanism of acquired chemotherapy resistance for bladder cancer offers new ideas for differentiated treatment
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
bladder cancer, found that semi-squamous differentiation is a new feature of chemotherapy resistance for bladder cancer, and then proposed a differentiated treatment strategy that targeted histoproteinase (Cathepsin H, CTSH) to promote the terminal differentiation of drug-resistant tumor cells, providing a new idea for the differentiation therapy of solid tumors.
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Can today's detection technology detect future SARS-CoV-2 variants? A new study by Cell gives the answer
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
The research team, led by Emory University and funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Rapid Accelerated Diagnostics (RADx) Technology Project, has developed a new method for assessing how mutations in the new coronavirus affect the recognition of antibodies used in rapid antigen testing.
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How do babies learn sounds in their native language?
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
Naturalistic speech supports distributional learning across contexts Babies can distinguish most sounds soon after birth, and by the age of 1, they become listeners of a particular language.
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Genome sequencing can be used as a first-line test for diagnosing intellectual disabilities
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
Researchers at the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have shown in a new study that genome sequencing can be used as a sensitive first-line test to diagnose patients with intellectual disabilities.
Source text searchGenome sequencing is a sensitive first-line test to diagnose individuals with intellectual disability
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The Lancet's new drug to save infants and young children from eczema is out
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
More than half of the treated children had eczema and itching symptoms reduced by at least 75 percent, the children slept all night for the first time instead of scratching, and parents saw the childr
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Professor Su Yanjie's research group published a paper in Developmental Science to reveal the relationship between children's psychological theory and aggressive behavior
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
133102022-09-18 In September 2022, Professor Su Yanjie's research group of the School of Psychological and Cognitive Sciences of Peking University published a paper entitled "The relation between aggression and theory of mind in children: A meta-analysis" in the internationally renowned academic journal Developmental Science, using the method of multi-level meta-analysis.
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Deep learning reveals the concept of predictive sequences in immunotherapy immune components
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
To further validate our findings, we collected two separate groups of skin cancer patients (represented as yost and sade) who underwent checkpoint closure therapy and underwent a holistic TCR-seq or single-cell TCR-seq test (34, 35) before starting treatment In these two patient cohorts, when 100 models of Monte Carlo (MC) cross-validation were performed on the CheckMate-038 dataset, we found that both cohorts had varying degrees of response prediction characteristics before initiating treatment [AUCs:yost=0.
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Just veins! Elimination of rare "swelling diseases" with CRISPR
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
Last year, Intellia and partner Regeneron reported in a landmark study that it had a rare genetic disorder called transthyroxine (ATR) amyloidosis, a CRISPR drug in the body that blocks the accumulation of liver proteins that can cause nerve pain, numbness and heart problems.
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The French, Wenzhe Research Group of the School of Ground and Space has made important progress in the study of lunar soil characteristics and sample source areas in the landing area of Chang'e-5
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
In December 2020, China's "Chang'e" 5 successfully collected 1. 731kg of lunar soil samples from the moon and successfully returned to Earth. This is China's first extraterrestrial object sample retur
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NEUROBIOL DIS A new generation of KCNQ2-channel antiepileptic drugs targeted for the treatment of rare mutant epilepsy has been demonstrated at animal level
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
On September 14, 2022, the Gao Zhaobing Research Group of the Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Professor Maurizio Taglialatela of Federico II University in Naple
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【Scientific research trends】Professor Ning Kang's team from the School of Life Sciences, Huazhong University of Science and Technology has made a series of achievements in the field of artificial intelligence mining of microbiome big data
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
On September 19, 2022, Professor Ning Kang's team from the Department of Systems Biology and Bioinformatics, School of Life Sciences, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, published the title "EXPERT: transfer learning-enabled context-aware microbial community classification" in Briefings in Bioinformatics, the only international authoritative journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology.
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Reveal key functions of important genes in leukemia
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
Johannes Zuber of the Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP) said: "We have many experimental tools to study gene function in cancer, but in EVI1-driven cases of AML, we lack the relevant disease models that use these tools.
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Molecular Psychiatry Xiong's research group analyzes the loop mechanism of fear enhancing the jump reflex
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
Illustration: Schematic diagram of the Jump Reflex and Fear Enhanced Jump Reflex LoopArticle Links: The startle reflex is a highly conserved instinctive defensive behavior possessed by mammals, which involves the reactions of hundreds of muscles throughout the animal's body, mainly manifested as eye closure, facial and head and neck contractions, and full-body bounces, such a rapid defense paradigm can prepare for further defensive responses.
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The first time in the world! Science at ShanghaiTech University analyzes the first bitter taste receptor structure
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
On September 16th, the joint research team of Zhijie Liu and Huatian of ShanghaiTech University published a long research paper in the journal Science, which made a major original breakthrough in the structural basis research of strychnine activating the human bitter taste receptor TAS2R46, and unveiled the "mystery" of bitter taste receptor for the first time in the world.
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Nature's breakthrough discovery: a new telomere structure!
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
The researchers discovered a new telomere structure DNA with the help of physics and a small magnet.
Columnar structure of human telomeric chromatin The researchers discovered a new telomere structure DNA with the help of physics and a small magnet.
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New Cell Insights: New signals that trigger the body's immune response
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
essayActin Cytoskeleton Remodeling Primes RIG-I-like Receptor Activation Image: Researchers at the Cleveland Clinic's Florida Center for Research and Innovation have found that the destruction of cellular structures known as actin cytoskeletons is a "start-up signal" for the body to respond to the virus.
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The first surgical method of scar-free healing appeared
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
Moscow, September 18 (Science and Technology Daily) -- The Moscow Institute of Electronic Technology, a Russian national research university, and the First Szechenov First Medical University of Moscow State have collaborated to develop the world's first new surgical method that heals wounds on internal and external organs without leaving scars.