Posts Tagged ‘i0plos16’

Notes from meetings last week: the PLOS Comp. Bio. Summit & the ICGC/PCAWG meeting (i0pcawg16,i0plos16)

Saturday, September 24th, 2016

TWEETS

https://storify.com/markgerstein/tweets-from-plos-comp-bio-editors-meeting-i0plos16.html

TAGGED ITEMS

https://linkstream2.gerstein.info/tag/i0plos16
https://linkstream2.gerstein.info/tag/i0pcawg16

PRIVATE SLIDE PICS

http://archive.gersteinlab.org/meetings/s/2016/09.24/slide-pics-from-i0pcawg16/ http://archive.gersteinlab.org/meetings/s/2016/09.24/i0pcawg16-extra/

TOP LINK

http://blogs.plos.org/biologue/2016/08/31/plos-computational-biology-symposium-2016/

PLOS Computational Biology Symposium 2016 | PLOS Biologue

Sunday, September 18th, 2016

http://blogs.plos.org/biologue/2016/08/31/plos-computational-biology-symposium-2016/

The Path to Cancer — Three Strikes and You’re Out — NEJM

Sunday, September 18th, 2016

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp1508811

Cancer etiology. Variation in cancer risk among tissues can be explained by the number of stem cell divisions. – PubMed – NCBI

Sunday, September 18th, 2016

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25554788

PD-1 Blockade in Tumors with Mismatch-Repair Deficiency — NEJM

Sunday, September 18th, 2016

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1500596#t=article

The Ghost Map: The Story of London’s Most Terrifying Epidemic–and How It Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World: Steven Johnson: 9781594482694: Amazon.com: Books

Sunday, September 18th, 2016

read this earlier, see
http://del.icio.us/mbgmbg/clust_ghostmap

https://www.amazon.com/Ghost-Map-Londons-Terrifying-Epidemic/dp/1594482691

BDS: Program Overview

Sunday, September 18th, 2016

http://bme.virginia.edu/bds/

Zebra (medicine) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sunday, September 18th, 2016

QT:{{”
Zebra is the American medical slang for arriving at an exotic medical diagnosis when a more commonplace explanation is more likely.[1] It is shorthand for the aphorism coined in the late 1940s by Dr. Theodore Woodward, professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, who instructed his medical interns: “When you hear hoofbeats, think of horses not zebras”.[2] Since horses are common in Maryland while zebras are relatively rare, logically one could confidently guess that an animal making hoofbeats is probably a horse. By 1960, the aphorism was widely known in medical circles.[3]
“}}
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zebra_(medicine)