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abhishaike

600 karmajoined 2 tahun yang lalu
i write at owlposting.com

Submissions

How to design a cancer vaccine (and improve them)

owlposting.com
3 points·by abhishaike·kemarin dulu·0 comments

Heuristics for lab robotics, and where its future may go

owlposting.com
13 points·by abhishaike·8 hari yang lalu·2 comments

Questions to ask when evaluating neurotech approaches

owlposting.com
3 points·by abhishaike·24 hari yang lalu·0 comments

Reasons to be pessimistic (and optimistic) on the future of biosecurity

owlposting.com
6 points·by abhishaike·24 hari yang lalu·2 comments

How to build a cancer vaccine, and whether they will work this time

owlposting.com
8 points·by abhishaike·24 hari yang lalu·0 comments

How to build a cancer vaccine, and whether they will work this time

owlposting.com
2 points·by abhishaike·bulan lalu·0 comments

Curious cases of financial engineering in biotech

owlposting.com
4 points·by abhishaike·2 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Curious cases of financial engineering in biotech

owlposting.com
1 points·by abhishaike·2 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Tario-2: A Whole-Transcriptome Foundation Model from H&E Alone

noetik.blog
2 points·by abhishaike·3 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Creating 'new knobs of control' in biology

owlposting.com
2 points·by abhishaike·3 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

A socratic dialogue over the utility of DNA language models

owlposting.com
1 points·by abhishaike·4 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

What happened to pathology AI companies?

owlposting.com
3 points·by abhishaike·4 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

Reasons to be pessimistic (and optimistic) on the future of biosecurity

owlposting.com
5 points·by abhishaike·4 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Heuristics for lab robotics, and where its future may go

owlposting.com
1 points·by abhishaike·4 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Heuristics for lab robotics, and where its future may go

owlposting.com
2 points·by abhishaike·5 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

AI After Drug Development

asteriskmag.com
4 points·by abhishaike·5 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

A primer on why microbiome research is hard

owlposting.com
2 points·by abhishaike·6 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Questions to ask when evaluating neurotech approaches

owlposting.com
1 points·by abhishaike·6 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

A socratic dialogue over why drugs work at all

owlposting.com
4 points·by abhishaike·6 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

The truth behind the 2026 J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference

owlposting.com
326 points·by abhishaike·6 bulan yang lalu·87 comments

comments

abhishaike
·24 hari yang lalu·discuss
LLMs probably wont change how likely that is :)
abhishaike
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Thank you for the kind words :)
abhishaike
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Very fair! We're working on a preprint right now
abhishaike
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Somewhat, we are assuming that a model trained on human data entirely is able to 'project' mouse data into a human transcriptomic space. It feels like something that should obviously fail (isn't it out of distribution?), but it works surprisingly well according to the perturbation controls we had! Morphology of tissue may simply be a rather universal substrate.

And yes, it is trained on 18,963-plex spatial transcriptomics :)

(I work at Noetik and wrote this article)
abhishaike
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Thanks for posting this here! And surprising its attracting attention, I have to imagine that the TAM for 2-hour-long biologics-manufacturing podcasts is small :)

If you're more interested in this person's work, his website is here: https://www.iku.bio/
abhishaike
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I'm going to be honest: I have absolutely no idea what this comment means
abhishaike
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I will investigate these other locations!
abhishaike
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Apologies, I do kinda auto-repost my articles here without thinking whether they are paywalled (nearly everything I’ve written isn’t)

here is an unpaywalled link that anyone can access: https://www.owlposting.com/p/8157b515-56ce-40a4-a7f0-da6d46f...

edit: please subscribe if you enjoyed this! lots of really crazy articles + podcasts in this subfield are planned for the upcoming month :) all free!
abhishaike
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I don't disagree!
abhishaike
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Thanks for posting this here! Sent this HN link to the founders, so they may be able to answer any Q's that people have
abhishaike
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
>molecules get screened against tox targets

sure! i cover this in the essay, the purpose of this dataset is not just toxicity, but repurposing also

>toxicity of major metabolites

this is planned (and also explicitly mentioned in the article)

>no need to worry about CYP’s

again, this is about more than just toxicity

>volume of distribution

i suppose, but this feels like a strange point to raise. this dataset doesnt account for a lot of things, no biological dataset does

>advertisement

to some degree: it is! but it is also one that is free for academic usage and the only one of its kind accessible to smaller biopharmas
abhishaike
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
<3 high praise, appreciate the kind words
abhishaike
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I completely agree, but I also think there is some truth to the related statement: 'cancer research often isn't conducted in a way that is actually useful'!

For example, in-vivo tumor experiments in mice can yield completely different results depending on exactly where the tumor was implanted. E.g. a 'lung cancer mouse model' may have the lung cancer injected just under the skin, also known as subcutaneous tumor models, instead of in the lung! Entirely because it's a lot more efficient + yields more trustable data, but the results are often deeply disconnected from how the tumor would naturally grow + respond to drugs within its host organ.
abhishaike
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
thanks for posting this here!
abhishaike
·10 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Fixed!
abhishaike
·10 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I think it has very limited therapeutic applications with what we know about RNA structure today! But there's a great deal of completely unknown RNA biology (some of which I touch on in the essay) that may greatly benefit from RNA structure. The bit I mention about Arrakis Therapeutics preclinical work in drugging the (structured) RNA version of the MYC protein points to that being a very real possibility. All interesting biotech startups are built on bets on where the future is going, and I'm very happy that someone (AtomicAI and others) is betting on this, because clearly the answer of 'is RNA structure useful' isn't super open-and-shut
abhishaike
·10 bulan yang lalu·discuss
oh yeah, I didn’t mean to say that they did claim that, that was just my (mis)conception