Connectomics is Method of the Year 2025!! @naturemethods just released the news https://t.co/hM0089GjEs In my perspective piece, I afford some predictions into the future and compare how we are doing vs. genomics https://t.co/0Zpbz2S0nc 1/3
BREAKING: Sugars essential for life have been found in pristine asteroid Bennu samples collected by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft. Combined with previous detections of amino acids and nucleobases, we see that life’s ingredients were widespread throughout the solar system: https://t.co/Tb3HpwZG9J
More on the study led by Yoshihiro Furukawa of @TohokuUniPR⤵️
@Bio_Lidia Creo que las carreras bio- son carreras diferentes, con objetivos diferentes y posibilidades diferentes. No creo que una sea mejor que otra
Sí estoy de acuerdo con el sobre marketing con las "bio-tags". Quizás un punto medio entre tu opinión y lo que existe ahora sería lo mejor.
@Bio_Lidia 3) Pones la biología a un nivel de posibilidades de generalización parecido al de mates o física. Pero no es así, muchos conocimientos de biología siguen siendo muy específicos para biología. Además, las carreras bio- tienen una alarmante falta de comprensión cuantitativa.
Mice harboring mutations in Fmr1, Cntnap2 or Shank3B show a blunted update of priors during decision-making, suggesting that distinct genetic instantiations of ASD may yield common neurophysiological and behavioral phenotypes
https://t.co/DzKz3y7PM1
El viernes pasado D. Santiago Posteguillo, experto en la Historia de Roma, estuvo en el Senado dando una conferencia sobre la importancia de Hispania.
Resulta que D. Santiago el 29 de octubre estaba a 50 metros del barranco del Poyo en Paiporta. Nadie fue ayudarles en tres días cuando estaban entre barro y muertos. Su testimonio estremece. La verdad estremece.
Durante más de tres días no aparecieron ni los bomberos, ni el Ejército. Estuvieron tres días entre cadáveres y barro.
El vídeo sólo dura 10 minutos. Merece la pena escucharlo. El relato de los políticos nada tiene que ver con la realidad.
Vamos, @RafaelNadal!
As you get ready to graduate from tennis, I’ve got a few things to share before I maybe get emotional.
Let’s start with the obvious: you beat me—a lot. More than I managed to beat you. You challenged me in ways no one else could. On clay, it felt like I was stepping into your backyard, and you made me work harder than I ever thought I could just to hold my ground. You made me reimagine my game—even going so far as to change the size of my racquet head, hoping for any edge.
I’m not a very superstitious person, but you took it to the next level. Your whole process. All those rituals. Assembling your water bottles like toy soldiers in formation, fixing your hair, adjusting your underwear... All of it with the highest intensity. Secretly, I kind of loved the whole thing. Because it was so unique—it was so you.
And you know what, Rafa, you made me enjoy the game even more.
OK, maybe not at first. After the 2004 Australian Open, I achieved the #1 ranking for the first time. I thought I was on top of the world. And I was—until two months later, when you walked on the court in Miami in your red sleeveless shirt, showing off those biceps, and you beat me convincingly. All that buzz I’d been hearing about you—about this amazing young player from Mallorca, a generational talent, probably going to win a major someday—it wasn’t just hype.
We were both at the start of our journey and it’s one we ended up taking together. Twenty years later, Rafa, I have to say: What an incredible run you’ve had. Including 14 French Opens—historic! You made Spain proud... you made the whole tennis world proud.
I keep thinking about the memories we’ve shared. Promoting the sport together. Playing that match on half-grass, half-clay. Breaking the all-time attendance record by playing in front of more than 50,000 fans in Cape Town, South Africa. Always cracking each other up. Wearing each other out on the court and then, sometimes, almost literally having to hold each other up during trophy ceremonies.
I’m still grateful you invited me to Mallorca to help launch the Rafa Nadal Academy in 2016. Actually, I kind of invited myself. I knew you were too polite to insist on me being there, but I didn’t want to miss it. You have always been a role model for kids around the world, and Mirka and I are so glad that our children have all trained at your academies. They had a blast and learned so much—like thousands of other young players. Although I always worried my kids would come home playing tennis as lefties.
And then there was London—the Laver Cup in 2022. My final match. It meant everything to me that you were there by my side—not as my rival but as my doubles partner. Sharing the court with you that night, and sharing those tears, will forever be one of the most special moments of my career.
Rafa, I know you’re focused on the last stretch of your epic career. We will talk when it’s done. For now, I just want to congratulate your family and team, who all played a massive role in your success. And I want you to know that your old friend is always cheering for you, and will be cheering just as loud for everything you do next.
Rafa that!
Best always, your fan,
Roger
@JMoragon9 Ley del Sistema de Protección Civil se recoge que esta subida de nivel puede hacerse en cualquier momento: "se corresponde con las emergencias de interés nacional, declaradas por la persona titular del Ministerio del Interior de acuerdo con la ley".
@JMoragon9 Sin quitarle la enorme parte de culpa a Mazón.Pero ampararse en una defensa a Sánchez es lo que nos ha traído aquí.Porque estos partidos han degenerado las instituciones a un nivel que nos podemos poner a temblar
No podemos tener unos presidentes autónomico y del gobierno así