@JetBlue Neither Safari, default Chrome, or the iPhone app worked for me, but I was able to get through and book a flight using Chrome's Incognito mode—sharing in case helpful for others
It has been said that there are more microbes in the human body than there are stars in the galaxy✨. Discover the exciting role of the microbiome in cancer diagnostics in our latest Coffee Chat – register here >>> https://t.co/WeXl2x9CfX
In association with @Micronoma
Our work with the @CJohnstonLab1 lab out today @Nature demonstrating the intratumoral microbiota impacts spatial, cellular and transcriptional heterogeneity in human cancer. Monster tweetorial below from Chris.
Behind the scenes of my latest illustration, on the cover of this issue of @CellCellPress! 🍄✨
Honest disclaimer: my process videos almost never look this clean, this really was one of a kind!
#sciart#scicomm#sciviz#sciencetwitter
To know more ➡️ https://t.co/wX87pnmoQ8
(5/5) Congrats also to @IlievLab for their independent research on the cancer mycobiome also published today in @CellCellPress! And thank you to @carlzimmer for writing a wonderful story about our work in The New York Times https://t.co/hbw7BQHjAu
(1/5) Did you know that there are bacteria in human tumors? Well, this is old news now 😉. Our new study, in collaboration with @StraussmanR+@TPilpel+@KnightLabNews, is featured on the cover of @CellCellPress, showing that human tumors contain fungi too! https://t.co/YHkIOTRbRn
You might not believe it, but the following 6 machine learning books are fully free:
- Deep Learning
- Dive into Deep Learning
- Machine Learning Engineering
- Python Data Science Handbook
- Probabilistic Machine Learning
- Machine Learning Yearning
Here are their links 🧵
Excited to share our #BioEssays cancer microbiome paper on diagnostics and clonal evolution! Clonal evolution cannot remain a 'sterile' theory any longer, with genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolomic microbial impacts on cancer cell fitness.
https://t.co/zGmskug29B
As a part of this remarkable Review, authors illustrated evidence for some of the prominent tissue #microbiomes implicated in #cancer#hallmarks, beginning with the most prominent and evidently impactful microbiome, that of the intestinal tract.
@CD_AACR
https://t.co/4F6JS1XJlx
Just published! We proudly present "Hallmarks of Cancer: New Dimensions" by Douglas Hanahan, the third update to the seminal series. https://t.co/bSer4maIjF @Ludwig_Cancer