Explore this gift article from The New York Times. You can read it for free without a subscription. www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
Explore this gift article from The New York Times. You can read it for free without a subscription. www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
Sleep pressure and slow-wave-rich NREM sleep exert distinct effects on cerebral vasomotion and on brain pulsations driven by respiratory and cardiac forces. Heightened sleep pressure (following 35βh of wakefulness) promotes vasomotion (yellow box). Slow-wave-rich NREM sleep enhances brain pulsations driven by the respiratory and cardiac cyclesβmore so in gray and white matter than in the ventricles (red boxes). The respiration- and cardiac-driven brain pulsations also intensify with deeper sleep (N3β>βN2) and correlate with EEG delta power, which is a measure of slow-wave activity (light vs. dark red boxes).
Sleep supports brain health partly by regulating fluid dynamics to clear waste. @ulvlarsen.bsky.social &co probe the relation between #sleep & fluid movement in the human #brain, finding that #SleepPressure & intensity have distinct effects on brain pulsations @plosbiology.org π§ͺ plos.io/3XQWCL6
Get your paper reviewed before peer review at www.qedscience.com
The mass spectrometry of microbiome-mediated metabolism of food: challenges and opportunities
#CurrOpinMicrobiol by @harshagouda.bsky.social et al from @pieterdorrestein.bsky.social
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
We show how most dietary molecular features remain unknown, which are then further diversified by the gut microbiome, leading to more unkowns. Some cool experiments from @amcaraballor.bsky.social
The interactions between food, microbiome and host that modulate health can be complex. Here, we offer a perspective on how mass spectrometry can be leveraged to address some of these challenges to understand host and microbial metabolism of food. A step closer to personalized health and nutrition.
Poster is made, printed and ready to go! Looking forward to my first mass-spec conference #ASMS2025 at Baltimore next week!
Molecules in urine and blood can reveal how much of a personβs diet comes from ultra-processed foods
https://go.nature.com/4kybHea
New @science.org
Exposomics. We're not doing nearly enough to understand and mitigate our toxic environmental exposures. A very insightful perspective
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Should you return home after earning your PhD abroad? This Nature article explores the dilemmas faced by international researchers considering a move back to their home countries. A thought-provoking read for anyone navigating global academic careers. οΏΌ
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
QC:MXP version 2.0 is now available to download for free from my GitHub page: www.qcmxp.org
Repeat-injection-based Quality Control, Batch Correction, Exploration & Data Cleaning. #Metabolomics #AnalyticalChemistry #Matlab
This is figure 1, which shows season of fertilization predetermines the metabolic fate of brown adipose tissue in human adults.
Individuals who were conceived in colder seasons are more likely to show higher brown adipose tissue activity, increased energy expenditure and a lower BMI, and lower fat accumulation around internal organs, suggests a study in Nature Metabolism. https://go.nature.com/4i3EYM0 π§ͺ
New blog post! In which I explain the issue with mediation analysis and sketch out one way to deal with the underlying causal inference problem -- in just a bit over 1,000 words!
If you have never found the time to read up on this, now is your chance.
www.the100.ci/2025/03/20/r...
In the world of LLMs, why am I going to YouTube? To learn the basics!
Event organizers often overlook the visa-related difficulties that researchers in low- and middle-income countries face. This must change, says Kara Hanson
https://go.nature.com/3DioEc0
Discovery of metabolites prevails amid in-source fragmentation #NatMetab www.nature.com/articles/s42...
Another fun paper that was started by a good and important question by Prajit - an undergrad in the lab - about imputation. We then teamed up with the Kelley lab as they are good at such benchmarking in data science. So fun to work woth them. pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
The #InternationalSpaceStation is overly sterile; making it βdirtierβ could improve astronaut health, microbiologists say. cell.com/cell/fulltex...
Learn more in @cp-cell.bsky.social
@pieterdorrestein.bsky.social, Rob Knight
A new resource rating >50,000 foods from 3 grocery stores
(Walmart, Target, and Whole Foods) for degree of processing and breakdown of ingredients
www.nature.com/articles/s43...
Website for consumers www.truefood.tech
Such a wonderful SIMB workshop on @gnps2.bsky.social covering classical mol networking, FBMN, ion identity based mol networking, FBMN-STATS, gnps-dashboard, CMMC-kb, Modifinder, MicrobeMASST, MassQL, and limited ReDU - many were covered at a workshop for the first time. 1/4
So fun at SIMB teaching the gnps ecosystem.
Metabolic changes of the blood metabolome after a date fruit challenge
doi.org/10.1016/j.jf...
7/12
An accurate IDMS-based method for absolute quantification of phytohemagglutinin, a major antinutritional component in common bean #JFoodSci ift.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
Welcome to the wonderful #mzmine @mzmine.bsky.social team in Bluesky @bsky.app .
So nice to have you in #ICTC13 metabolomics workshop !
Check it out at www.ictc13.gr
New tensor factorization paper out today β a fun collaboration with Pixu Shi, Liat Shenhav, Rob Knight, & Anru_Zhang! π Check it out here: genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10....
HAHAHA π€―
Iβm starting to fall in love with math again. It was enzyme kinetics in grad school, now itβs testing different models on clinical data.
What if I told you that if you have coyote "problems" (as in, you feel there are too many), killing them...can make it WORSE?
Me on @rolandkays.com 's latest paper, so glad his lab is studying this!
teamtrash.substack.com/p/hunt-more-...
Sadly, itβs a good time to once again share this amazing infographic that we ran at @science.org more than 7 years ago
π§ͺ #IDsky
www.science.org/content/arti...