Opinion
A Future Beyond Animal Testing: Why ORIVA Matters and How Computational Models Bridge the Gap
Animal testing is costly, slow, and poorly predictive. ORIVA offers a human-relevant alternative with the potential to change that.
The chains of amino acids that make up proteins are critical to every form of life. The complex ways that these proteins fold ...
Tile assembly models form a robust theoretical framework for understanding how simple components, such as molecular tiles, can organise themselves into complex structures. At the core of these models ...
A biomedical researcher combining advanced mouse models with human-based and computational approaches explains why we can’t ...
Development in artificial intelligence has paved the path for the integration of computational pathology in clinical workflow, improving the accuracy and reducing the workload for medical ...
Computational models and simulations have had an important role in engineering analysis since as far back as the 1960s. It is widely recognized that the use of modeling and simulation tools can make ...
Artificial intelligence (AI) for science has rapidly gained momentum at an extreme pace. Models trained on the scientific record are generating hypotheses and even running experiments in automated ...
The interdisciplinary field of language learning and computational models has witnessed rapid growth in recent years. Researchers pursue an integrative approach that combines cognitive science, ...
Space exploration has always captivated our imagination, offering the promise of discovering new worlds and pushing the boundaries of human capability. As commercial space travel becomes more ...
16don MSN
Computational model predicts the hemodynamic response of patients following atrial fibrillation
Atrial fibrillation (AFib) is a cardiac disorder in which the chambers of the heart beat rapidly and irregularly. It's the most common type of arrhythmia and the leading cardiac cause of stroke.
Hosted on MSN
All models are wrong − a computational modeling expert explains how engineers make them useful
Nicknamed “Galloping Gertie” for its tendency to bend and undulate, the Tacoma Narrows Bridge had just opened to traffic on July 1, 1940. In a now infamous failure, in the face of moderate winds the ...
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