After evaluating tools and stuff, finally settled with Dropbox synced plain markdown files. I have a generic file per week (making one per day was too much hassle), also separate files for specific projects.
I also recommend G.M.Weinberg's the Fieldstone Method on Writing.
Paged through the article for pictures, but the only example with tensors was trivial. Could anyone who read the thing tell if there's an intuitive explanation of the binary operation on full nets?
My bad, you make me remember. When children were smaller, indeed they were quite energetic up to until some quite high degree fever.
Now they are older, and fever starts to knock them out sooner. Fever suppressants make them bouncy again still (so no rush to give them until 38.7-ish, as long as they drink well etc).
If vaccination of the child could prevent some baseline level of IL-17a from developing (in offsprings who already suffered the brain degradation in the womb), it could be interesting.
They should look for children who had the risk factor (infected mother) but didn't turn autistic to see if they have the levels elevated. Long shot.
> The reason for that, the researchers found, is that in these mice [with certain genes missing and whose mother didn't have inflammation while pregnant], inflammation did not stimulate IL-17a production.
What I wonder if baseline mice produce IL-17a in response to inflammation?
My guess would be no. I would also wonder if some low to moderate infection in mothers can spare the offspring from autism, but still prime IL production?
I also recommend G.M.Weinberg's the Fieldstone Method on Writing.