@ReductioAbsrdm Profile picture

Aditya Patil

@ReductioAbsrdm

PhD student in Bioengineering @hseas @MGHCancerCenter @MassGenBrigham. BITS Pilani ‘21.

Similar User
Vinayak photo

@vinayak_agg

Shreyasi Ghosh Ray photo

@SGR_v2

parth photo

@KashikarParth

Anirudh Singla photo

@SinglaAnirudh

Rahul Sunder photo

@rednusluhar

mehwateva photo

@ballercoasters

Rahul Chhabra photo

@rahulchhabra07

a Seagull photo

@wanderingsim

Abhinav Asthana photo

@a85

Master of none photo

@PresentInMyLife

Krishna Swaroop Dhulipalla photo

@poorawsanhsirk

Nihal Singh photo

@nihalssingh

Kushal Bhagia 🇮🇳 photo

@kushalbhagia

Tanvi Gupta photo

@TanviGupta410

Anshu photo

@anshuagrawal_

Aditya Patil Reposted

Recently discovered Ajay Shah, thanks to @ReductioAbsrdm What a phenomenal human being. Loved this blog post of his. blog.theleapjournal.org/2008/05/what-v…


Aditya Patil Reposted

Amazing research at MGB is going on today! 😉

This post is unavailable.

Aditya Patil Reposted

The inaugural Alma Dal Co School on Collective Behavior will be in Venice (Sep 29-Oct 4, 2025). This unique school honors Alma (1989-2022), whose brilliant work bridging physics and microbiology revealed how metabolic interactions structure microbial communities. @Alma_DalCo 1/12

Tweet Image 1

Aditya Patil Reposted

Fourier transform of Google Trends of Fourier transform

Tweet Image 1

Aditya Patil Reposted

Science has a hypothesis-testing part, but it has an equally crucial ‘night science’ mode, where new ideas are improvised for the first time.

Tweet Image 1

Aditya Patil Reposted

How to toast my Nobel prize? A poker night with Magnus Carlsen 👇🫡 thetimes.com/article/9d8c23…

Some random dudes turned up to a poker and chess night at my house. One of them was even mumbling something about a Nobel prize… #chess #NobelPrize



Aditya Patil Reposted

Demis Hassabis: "One of my good chess buddies is hosting a poker evening. Magnus will be there. And some world poker champions. It’ll be crazy. That is my kind of celebration.” thetimes.com/uk/science/art…


Aditya Patil Reposted

One small wiggle for a worm, one large leap for science-kind

Tweet Image 1

Aditya Patil Reposted

His theory of kinetic proofreading explained how DNA replication could be so accurate, a major achievement in biology. x.com/StorkDevon/sta…

Everybody's talking about the nobel prize, and it reminded me of my favorite Hopfield paper, Kinetic Proofreading! It's a blueprint for how life prevents information decay by spending extra energy. I wrote a blog post on it a few years ago devonstork.com/p/kinetic-proo…



Aditya Patil Reposted

"The central idea [of physics is] that the world is understandable, that you should be able to take anything apart, understand the relationships between its constituents, do experiments, and on that basis be able to develop a quantitative understanding of its behavior." [1/2]


Aditya Patil Reposted

Computer science is physics because computers are made of physics but physics is biology because physicists are made of biology Ergo: all nobel prizes are technically prizes for biology congratulations to biology for extending a perfect nobel prize run


Aditya Patil Reposted

Hopfield & Hinton getting the physics prize is sort of like Bob Dylan getting the literature prize: it stretches the category, maybe almost to the breaking point (but also, it's probably good for the field), but boy, do they deserve it!

BREAKING NEWS The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 2024 #NobelPrize in Physics to John J. Hopfield and Geoffrey E. Hinton “for foundational discoveries and inventions that enable machine learning with artificial neural networks.”

Tweet Image 1


Aditya Patil Reposted

How did @HopfieldJohn decide to work on the topic that led to his Nobel Prize? "I was now looking for A PROBLEM, not a problem ... How mind emerges from brain is to me the deepest question posed by our humanity. Definitely A PROBLEM." More here: pni.princeton.edu/people/john-j-…


Aditya Patil Reposted

Omg!!! I did a double take when I saw 'Nobel Prize,' and figured @NicoleCRust was making a very cool joke, because John Hopfield certainly deserves the Nobel Prize. Then I heard the news. What a right and perfect and monumentally inspired choice, celebrating the boundary…

How did @HopfieldJohn decide to work on the topic that led to his Nobel Prize? "I was now looking for A PROBLEM, not a problem ... How mind emerges from brain is to me the deepest question posed by our humanity. Definitely A PROBLEM." More here: pni.princeton.edu/people/john-j-…



Aditya Patil Reposted

Sydney Brenner established C. elegans as a model organism starting in the 1960s, which led to the first connectome in 1986. In Sept 2007, we invited Sydney to deliver the inaugural lecture for our new @Harvard @MIT class on connectomics, and shockingly he accepted!

Tweet Image 1

Aditya Patil Reposted

Congratulations to our very own Gary Ruvkun, PhD, from @MGHMolBio on receiving the Nobel Prize in medicine! Read more about his lab and research: molbio.massgeneral.org/labs/ruvkun-la… #microdna


Aditya Patil Reposted

Also renewing my yearly bet on Miller/Cooper!

Or, the other long overdue @NobelPrize to Max Cooper & Jacques Miller for discovering the function of the thymus and identifying two major subsets of lymphocytes (T cells and B cells) and their function!

Tweet Image 1
Tweet Image 2


Aditya Patil Reposted

I apologize if our previous preprint post was taken as if the original results were irreproducible. The skin clearing was reproduced. Although other issues remain, we decided to retract our preprint. I apologize to @HongNeuroTech and the community for the confusion.


Aditya Patil Reposted

Check out our new bioRxiv preprint that challenges the recent in vivo optical clearing paper with tartrazine dye in Science. To be clear, they only demonstrated optical clearing of *dead cells*. Tartrazine cannot make live tissues transparent doi.org/10.1101/2024.0…


Loading...

Something went wrong.


Something went wrong.