DNA-encoded libraries are revolutionizing #drug discovery
http://CEN.ACS.org/articles/95/i25/DNA-encoded-libraries-revolutionizing-drug.html For selected compounds, barcode readout of synthetic steps
Archive for August, 2017
How DNA-encoded libraries are revolutionizing drug discovery | June 19, 2017 Issue – Vol. 95 Issue 25 | Chemical & Engineering News
August 16, 2017Eclipse google search trends
August 16, 2017link to the eclipse google search trends article.
The path of…#Eclipse2017 is already altering real-world behavior, as evident from a $GOOG flu-trends-like analysis
https://www.WashingtonPost.com/news/wonk/wp/2017/08/01/the-path-of-the-solar-eclipse-is-already-altering-real-world-behavior/
Analysis | The path of the solar eclipse is already altering real-world behavior The Washington Post · by Christopher Ingraham · August 1, 2017
How to Watch a Solar Eclipse – Science Guides – The New York Times
August 16, 2017How to Watch #Eclipse2017
https://www.NYTimes.com/guides/science/how-to-watch-a-solar-eclipse “Totality” is cosmically special: sun is 400X larger than moon but also 400x farther away
https://twitter.com/markgerstein/status/898022896446164992
QT:{{”
WHY IS AN ECLIPSE SO SPECIAL?
This perfect sun-moon-Earth alignment is an extraordinary cosmic coincidence. The sun is 400 times larger than the moon, but it also happens to be 400 times farther away, which to the observer on the ground means they are almost identical in size. The match is so uncanny that on some occasions, the moon is at the farthest point of its slightly elongated orbit and fails to cover the sun fully, leaving a ring of sunlight. …In all
the hundreds of billions of star systems of our Milky Way galaxy, few are likely to produce total solar eclipses like ours.
…
The moment when the moon passes completely in front of the sun, an event called “totality,” will begin in Lincoln City at 10:16 a.m. PT and travel to the other side of the country, and exiting at
Charleston, South Carolina at 2:48 p.m. ET. The entire journey takes about an hour and a half.
Even if you are not in the path of the total eclipse, a partial eclipse will be visible throughout the continental United States. The last remnants of the lunar shadow will finish passing over the country at 4:09 p.m.
…
Even though an eclipse effectively turns day into night, never look directly at the sun.
Solar eclipses are especially dangerous. Not because of anything special about the light during the eclipse, but because the sudden changes in luminosity can cause retina damage before your eyes have a chance to adapt, or before you have an opportunity to look away.
Do wear eclipse glasses. The only safe way to view the eclipse during its partial phases is to wear eclipse filters. We already suggested a few you should consider, but even if you don’t go with those, glasses that meet the proper international safety standards should have a certification of ISO 12312-2.
“}}
Where to Get Solar Eclipse Glasses, Updated Advice – American Academy of Ophthalmology
August 16, 2017Museum Of Natural History To Host Solar Eclipse Viewing Event On Upper West Side – Upper West Side, NY Patch
August 16, 2017QT:{{”
The eclipse is expected to begin around 1:23 p.m. for New York City viewers with peak views occurring around 2:44 p.m.m according to the museum.
“}}
How to make soldiers’ brains better at noticing threats
August 14, 2017How to make…brains better at noticing threats
https://www.Economist.com/news/science-and-technology/21725543-target-recognition-warfare-how-make-soldiers-brains-better-noticing beyond AR – AT, augmented thinking! Where machines help us recognize
Reconstruction and signal propagation analysis of the Syk signaling network in breast cancer cells
August 14, 2017Naldi, A. et al. Reconstruction and signal propagation analysis of the Syk signaling network in breast cancer cells. PLOS Computational Biology 13, e1005432 (2017).
Reconstruction & signal propagation analysis of the Syk signaling #network http://journals.PLoS.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005432 Inferring potential targets of the kinase