Says @UCSF epidemiologist Dr. George Rutherford of a potential COVID-19 surge in California, "I think there’s a high risk of it, but so far so good so long as people continue to take things seriously."https://t.co/KTXdlSuHm9
— SFGATE (@SFGate) October 22, 2020
— UCSF Global Health (@IGHSatUCSF) October 21, 2020
Studies like these will inform public health campaigns to address vaccine hesitancy when a #COVID19 #vaccine becomes available.#PrecisionPopulationHealth https://t.co/LZ372vXAmV
— UCSF Precision Medicine (@UCSFPrecision) October 22, 2020
Covid (@UCSF) Chronicles, Day 218
1/ Excellent @washingtonpost piece today on Operation Warp Speed, & its (likely) success in moving us from discovery of a new virus to having one or more safe & effective vaccines available in about a year, God willing. https://t.co/Q0gHDqmxk4
— Bob Wachter (@Bob_Wachter) October 22, 2020
Interesting & healthy debate over the hypothesis raised by @UCSF’s Monica Gandhi and George Rutherford — I don’t read their paper as claiming the association is proven, and reasonable people will view the theory (& supportive circumstantial evidence) differently. That’s science. https://t.co/xNSH3ZK6aM
— Bob Wachter (@Bob_Wachter) October 23, 2020
Coming down from debate by watching @UCSF Grand Rounds w/@Bob_Wachter. @JuliaLMarcus brings a thoughtful perspective. Community engagement, especially in our most marginalized groups, is going to be critical in the rollout and messaging around a vaccine. https://t.co/0SMp9D5VE5
— Kishore Hari (@sciencequiche) October 23, 2020
Doctors from San Francisco's Department of Public Health, UCSF, UC Berkeley, and Stanford named to California's COVID-19 vaccine 'workgroup' – KGO-TV https://t.co/h1A1DARUWM
— San Francisco (@SanFrancisco361) October 20, 2020
Everybody's talking about vaccines, but @UCSF is working on a straitjacket of sorts for coronaviruses that would prevent their spikes from grabbing on and infecting our tissues.
‘AeroNabs’ Promise Powerful, Inhalable Protection Against COVID-19 https://t.co/kGoZ5uYxkj
— Artem Russakovskii (@ArtemR) October 21, 2020
https://twitter.com/carrie_byington/status/1318549165111083008
"We must not wait idly for an elusive Covid-19 vaccine" escreve Director of The Global Health Group at the University of California, San Francisco https://t.co/U3NKE1KmLU via @financialtimes
— lorenagbarberia (@lorenagbarberia) August 3, 2020
Evidence supports "the adoption of similar governmental policies eliminating non-medical exemptions to help address the growing public health challenge of vaccine hesitancy," researchers at the University of California San Francisco said https://t.co/YgpFUQZOI7
— AFP news agency (@AFP) December 24, 2019
If you missed this rich discussion about the review process for COVID-19 vaccines, the recording is available on the @CIDRAP YouTube channel: https://t.co/ZFa5Mh3GYb https://t.co/uao9OaqbMu
— Michael Osterholm (@mtosterholm) October 9, 2020
As #Covid19 cases surge in a number of countries, 75% of critical drugs needed to treat Covid patients are already in short supply, a @CIDRAP report shows. And it's not even winter yet. From @pharmalot. https://t.co/yiekulBsdq
— Helen Branswell (@HelenBranswell) October 22, 2020
Dr M Osterman , Center for Infectious Disease Research University of Minnesota predicts worse #COVID19 days to come in #US & vaccine availability “by 2nd or 3rd quarter of next year” https://t.co/d2nW5hSlnU
— Julia Hengstler (@jhengstler) October 24, 2020
"An infectious diseases expert at the University of Minnesota recently offered an ominous warning: With infections rising and compliance eroding, he said, 'the next 6 to 12 weeks are going to be the darkest of the entire pandemic.'"https://t.co/5IYhb78BO8
— Claire Withycombe (@kcwithycombe) October 20, 2020
COVID-19 developments in Minnesota: HealthPartners will be enrolling at least 1,500 people in a clinical trial that will determine whether a vaccine developed by Oxford University is effective at preventing the coronavirus. https://t.co/w5EalKH1u7
— MPR News (@MPRnews) September 3, 2020
“The first #vaccines that come out are probably not going to be the best vaccines,” Dr. Nicole Lurie, who helped lead pandemic planning under the Obama administration, said at a University of Minnesota vaccine symposium.https://t.co/WUEjPaOpuz #COVID19 #COVID19vaccine #COVID
— Chris Hendel (@chrishendel) September 1, 2020
Michael Osterholm, director of University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy:
“We are not planning for the fact that we are going to see a very substantial part of our country become infected over the next 12-18 months if we don’t have a vaccine." pic.twitter.com/Xc4AoMOGXr
— JM Rieger (@RiegerReport) June 14, 2020
Researchers at the University of Minnesota desperately need volunteers in an effort to find a cure or vaccine for COVID-19, reports @jeff_wagner4. | https://t.co/KVqqepUvSC pic.twitter.com/G0rnHd5IdW
— WCCO – CBS Minnesota (@WCCO) April 15, 2020
University of Minnesota researchers are currently developing a fentanyl vaccine that could prevent overdoses before they even happen. https://t.co/AATaLe5ylS
— KARE 11 (@kare11) October 7, 2020
University of Minnesota researchers get grant for flu vaccine research https://t.co/rv5NA0IwLo pic.twitter.com/Y50Xn0s90z
— KARE 11 (@kare11) January 25, 2019
I've already found out that Elizabeth was the assistant of Dr Charles Nathaniel Hewitt while he was at the University of Minnesota. Hewitt worked on producing the small pox vaccine. His library was donated to the @MayoClinic Libraries. https://t.co/rE6nKgTSfi pic.twitter.com/5AAQuSfo3j
— Siobhan (@SiobhanLeachman) June 4, 2020
New Oxford machine learning-based COVID-19 test can provide results in under 5 minutes https://t.co/5QuILZZ98n by @etherington
— TechCrunch (@TechCrunch) October 15, 2020
Step inside the San Francisco office using 100 lava lamps to protect the internet from infiltration https://t.co/ubHnl6UnND
— WIRED (@WIRED) October 19, 2020
#Facebook, and possibly #Google, "optimize" ad delivery in discriminatory ways, even when advertisers do not target. This could be in breach of the law.
Read the story by @nicolaskb – available in English and German ⤵️ https://t.co/ZTPG64RUMT
— AlgorithmWatch (@algorithmwatch) October 19, 2020
Today we are releasing research into the role of momentum in non-convex optimization. Our hope is that understanding how momentum functions can help us develop new and better optimization algorithms for training AI systems.https://t.co/A05HTIhLSm
— Facebook AI (@facebookai) October 16, 2020
Algorithm discovers that every lion has a unique and trackable roar#AI #BigData #Analytics #DataSciencehttps://t.co/64hKeByK7H pic.twitter.com/5R6abHaD0o
— La Forge AI (@LaForge_AI) October 15, 2020
Research by @UofTMedicine & @UofTCompSci's @MarzyehGhassemi suggests that physicians may "over-trust" #AI tools when steps are taken to make the algorithms' decisions more transparent, leading to more errors. #UofT https://t.co/btq5ER2KnC
— U of T News (@UofTNews) October 19, 2020
This robot grows like a vine
#Robotics #Automation #Robot #ArtificialIntelligence #MachineLearning #Engineering #AI #IOT By @techinsider pic.twitter.com/B4fnaXkxU5— VisiveAI (@VisiveAI) October 14, 2020
What is AI(Artificial Intelligence)? https://t.co/zaJPFqg67v pic.twitter.com/AdsCW5DqcK
— Palo Alto Networks Certifications (@PaloAltoGuides) October 14, 2020
Artificial intelligence and machine learning: A new blueprint for the fintech industry https://t.co/yMBgtjy4nn
— DATAFYiNG (@DATAFYiNG) October 14, 2020
Today Facebook AI and Carnegie Mellon are announcing the Open Catalyst Project, using AI to accelerate quantum mechanical simulations — and thus discover scalable ways to store and use renewable energy. https://t.co/ypZlrelqCB pic.twitter.com/WcGNDfQLwn
— Facebook AI (@facebookai) October 14, 2020
https://twitter.com/TechNation/status/1316287729332891650
Better recycling thanks to robots with #machinelearning and #artificialintelligence via @realtechmatters pic.twitter.com/qR4WKrNCGy
— Nicolas Babin (@Nicochan33) October 13, 2020
How robots, artificial intelligence, and machine learning will affect employment and public policy https://t.co/NtG0ibXUgM
— ML @ REDDIT (@mxlearn) October 28, 2015
Carl Benedikt Frey, who directs Oxford’s Technology and Employment program, broke down three areas where human intelligence still beats artificial intelligence: perception and manipulation, social intelligence; and creativity. #frontlinePBS #AI READ: https://t.co/48xFnAsEhb
— FRONTLINE (@frontlinepbs) November 6, 2019
If artificial intelligence can identify the subtle decisions that end up excluding people from employment, it could also spot those that lead to more diverse and inclusive workplaces https://t.co/9oW4vnq4u6
— The New York Times (@nytimes) March 11, 2020
https://twitter.com/SwissCognitive/status/1315952931661848577
Forbes says Artificial Intelligence is like the DNA of data. Data alone can’t solve problems without an interpreter to fill in the gaps. How is your company using data for insights?#AI #ML #futurism #IntelligenceFactory #digitaltransformation #dx #data https://t.co/xb9tHt0T6f
— Intelligence Factory (@IntellFactory) March 10, 2020
Today's blogger examines how artificial intelligence could change how we look at DNA evidence in the future.https://t.co/NLRNvbr7VX
— ISHInews (@ishinews) May 7, 2020
Microorganisms can also inhabit distal tissues beyond the gut. Through using artificial intelligence models, new research in @nature identifies signatures of microbial DNA and RNA in tumours and in the blood across multiple human cancers https://t.co/aGpPQgFQSw pic.twitter.com/7xwhGxY0Ax
— GutMicrobiota Health (@GMFHx) March 17, 2020
Artificial intelligence, DNA sequencing, robotics, energy storage and blockchain technology already are proving to be transformational, according to @cathiedwood https://t.co/rlUyMQojA4
— Bloomberg Opinion (@bopinion) September 16, 2020
ICYMI: Traces of prehistoric “ghost populations,” beyond Neanderthals and Denisovans, lurk in some people’s DNA. Artificial intelligence is our best hope for finding them.https://t.co/owEqES97cx
— Quanta Magazine (@QuantaMagazine) November 23, 2019
“It’s a DNA vaccine that’s been produced by using computer modelling and artificial intelligence. We think it would be an effective vaccine to protect people from COVID-19.”https://t.co/kk1BrruprT
— Globalnews.ca (@globalnews) August 28, 2020
In the first-ever auction of its kind, a painting created by artificial intelligence has sold for nearly half a million dollars. A computer used a special algorithm to generate the image after scanning 15,000 human-made paintings completed between the 14th and 20th centuries. pic.twitter.com/Nm57B87nMy
— CBS This Morning (@CBSThisMorning) October 26, 2018
Artificial Intelligence Art: painting titled "Portrait of Edmond de Belamy", created by an algorithm, sells for $432,500 at Christie's auction in New Yorkhttps://t.co/KCr2xCzPpF pic.twitter.com/cvKsg8Wmk0
— AFP news agency (@AFP) October 26, 2018
The first lot in the Algorithm Auction: a pencil-and-ink drawing of the OkCupid Compatibility Calculation http://t.co/Z8HAW9kmgd
— The New Yorker (@NewYorker) March 27, 2015
Algorithms help devise better telecom spectrum auctions https://t.co/9cNmI2PURy
— LSE Business Review (@LSEforBusiness) October 4, 2020
Solving AI's 'black box' problem: Learning how algorithms make decisions https://t.co/pP6RDxfdKt
— Mashable (@mashable) October 11, 2020
SAS: Which #MachineLearning #Algorithm Should I Use?#BigData #Analytics #DataScience #AI #IoT #IIoT #Python #RStats #TensorFlow #Java #JavaScript #ReactJS #GoLang #CloudComputing #Serverless #DataScientist #Linux #Programming #Coding #100DaysofCode
https://t.co/EM0JbNlCt2— Gulshan Yadav (@thisisgulshan) October 10, 2020
Bringing together @coheremed's Deep Sepsis AI algorithm along with @AmbientClinical's Sepsis DART™ (a sepsis alert system built using licensed @MayoClinic technologies) to enable early detection & treatment of #sepsis.https://t.co/TUFQiMj19l
— Cohere-Med Inc. (@coheremed) October 9, 2020
Can you put a patent on machine learning algorithms, and should this be possible? » https://t.co/2O9eOSPBDa
#AI #MachineLearning #ML #BigData #IoT #DeepLearning #Robotics
— Arjen van Berkum (@arjenvanberkum) October 5, 2020
https://twitter.com/techopcode/status/1314404304778747904
“Just as data are not neutral, algorithms are not neutral.” https://t.co/vQqvUETmqp #machinelearning #AI #healthcare #ethics #algorithm #computervision #100daysofcode #MIT #microsoft
— Analytics India Magazine (@Analyticsindiam) October 10, 2020
Amsterdam and Helsinki become first cities to launch AI registers explaining how they use algorithms. The goal is to make AI in public services more transparent.#AI #MachineLearning #AIEthics https://t.co/Od8lOd6YP0
— Lionbridge AI (@LionbridgeAI) October 12, 2020
Machine learning algorithm predicts sex-specific drug effects using over 50 years of #FDA data, correcting for male bias. @nicktatonetti and @Payalchandak7 report their findings in @Patterns_CP. https://t.co/BchjtrpEiv#AI #computerscience pic.twitter.com/026NICnZnZ
— Cell Press (@CellPressNews) October 7, 2020
In our digital present, the braided strand of politics, computing, advertising, and television has evolved. We decoded the #Election2020 with @robbymook @DavMicRot @BostonJoan & @StevenLevy last month. Check out the conversation in our #CHMLive recap: https://t.co/DqXmUPC4bb
— Computer History Museum (@ComputerHistory) October 8, 2020
Unblock uniformed AI developers https://t.co/V2lRci7otA
— War on the Rocks (@WarOnTheRocks) October 12, 2020
Dear Facebook, This is How You’re Breaking Democracy.
A Former Facebook Insider Explains How the Platform’s Algorithms Polarize Our Society https://t.co/4msfSTfoox pic.twitter.com/rYRvY2XtGJ
— Open Culture (@openculture) October 11, 2020
"You go into the lab, do an experiment, and get a little bit of knowledge about the world that unravels another piece of the mystery of nature. I love that." – #NobelPrize winner Jennifer Doudna https://t.co/8naVaQVwOx pic.twitter.com/N8ujXGxfdG
— Innovative Genomics Institute (@igisci) October 9, 2020
From a profanity-filled restaurant scrapbook to a multi-thousand-page set of culinary lab notes, 10 of the best cookbooks of the 21st century. https://t.co/9jWxNK8wEm
— The New Yorker (@NewYorker) October 20, 2020
Remdesivir becomes first FDA fully-approved coronavirus treatmenthttps://t.co/ahM354QV8q
— NewsChannel 5 (@NC5) October 22, 2020
#BREAKING: The Tennessee Department of Health released its plan for the distribution of a COVID-19 vaccination. https://t.co/hOPzUo4OHn
— wvlt (@wvlt) October 21, 2020
'We're very concerned' | Hospitalizations continue to rise across Tennessee https://t.co/VI7y7RPIlB
— WBIR Channel 10 (@wbir) October 22, 2020
Sumner and Wilson Counties join Williamson in reinstating mask mandate. https://t.co/mQ0gbz3C54
— NewsChannel 5 (@NC5) October 22, 2020
"The virus is surging," @DLeonhardt writes in The Morning newsletter. These three charts explain how: https://t.co/SAjU1Kbacs
— The New York Times (@nytimes) October 20, 2020
Coronavirus Breath Testing System Developed in Japan by Shimadzu and Tohoku University. https://t.co/xLktvH01Rf
— Shimadzu Medical Systems USA (@shimadzumedical) October 20, 2020
Japan in developing an equipment that can detect coronavirus in breaths.#Covid_19 @TohokuUniPR @SHIMADZU_PR https://t.co/ltCD6pey60
— Consulat Japon Montréal 総領事館 (@JaponMontreal) October 16, 2020
Johnson & Johnson pauses COVID-19 vaccine trials after participant's 'unexplained illness.' https://t.co/XFf8yOpjoW pic.twitter.com/ZZRs9iObjP
— Complex (@Complex) October 13, 2020
Researchers Show How #AI Could Stop Cyberattacks Messing With Hospital CT Scanners
If there’s one thing a hospital patient doesn’t want to think about as they prepare for a medical ..https://t.co/LXAdlP1LRt#7wData#algorithmshttps://t.co/bCzC5BU9Qa— Yves Mulkers (@YvesMulkers) October 14, 2020
Using X-ray images & AI, UW‒Madison researchers have developed a highly accurate way to determine when pneumonia is caused by COVID-19. The new algorithm correctly diagnosed 88% of cases; investigators are now determining how to apply it in the field.https://t.co/OuQ882D03s
— UW–MaskUp (@UWMadison) October 16, 2020
The new UCF co-developed algorithm can accurately identify COVID-19 cases, as well as distinguish them from influenza. #DataScience #COVID19 #ArtificialIntelligence https://t.co/4QJctqzebc
— Open Data Science (@odsc) October 18, 2020
Does your blood type affect how severe your COVID symptoms are? https://t.co/l652lIJhfK
— WWL-TV (@WWLTV) October 16, 2020
Saturday (10/17) is World Hypertension Day, a day to raise awareness about high blood pressure. Check out these ways to help manage your blood pressure. pic.twitter.com/zWD3pNaNGe
— KTVN 2 News (@KTVN) October 17, 2020
Female doctors spend more time with patients, order more tests and spend more time discussing preventive care than their male counterparts, according to a new study led by Ishani Ganguli of HMS and @BrighamWomens (via @CNN) https://t.co/JmTzYpVfwW
— Harvard Medical School (@harvardmed) October 6, 2020
Adam Rogers ’92 writes about the trust challenges that the COVID-19 vaccine currently faces, as well as those it will face in the future once it's available. https://t.co/Rg4si35Tph
— Pomona College (@pomonacollege) September 28, 2020