Felipe Del Valle (@coffee_lipe) 's Twitter Profile
Felipe Del Valle

@coffee_lipe

Más café que persona. Cell Biologist. Ph.D. In love with ☕🔬🏃‍♂️📷 Opinions in this account are my own. (find me on 🦋!)

ID: 894905111046180864

linkhttp://fadelvalle.bsky.social calendar_today08-08-2017 12:56:19

3,3K Tweet

869 Followers

1,1K Following

Antoine Fabri (@antoine_fabri) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I'm excited to introduce {boxview} to decipher your #rstats code without painfully scrolling and losing your way between if and else or nested loops. `boxview::boxview(fun)` and you're good to go. Compare standard print vs boxview(). Which do you prefer? github.com/cynkra/boxview

I'm excited to introduce {boxview} to decipher your #rstats code without painfully scrolling and losing your way between if and else or nested loops. `boxview::boxview(fun)` and you're good to go. Compare standard print vs boxview(). Which do you prefer?
github.com/cynkra/boxview
J Cell Science (@j_cell_sci) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Joanna Pylvänäinen, Hanna Grobe and Guillaume Jacquemet present their practical guidelines for data exploration in quantitative cell biology. journals.biologists.com/jcs/article/13… #OpenAccess

Joanna Pylvänäinen, Hanna Grobe and Guillaume Jacquemet present their practical guidelines for data exploration in quantitative cell biology.
journals.biologists.com/jcs/article/13… 
#OpenAccess
preLights (@prelights) 's Twitter Profile Photo

New #spotLights episode! We’re kicking off our #biologists100 series (led by Jonty Townson) with Richard Sever (Richard Sever) We discuss the recently launched #openRxiv, the importance + future of preprints & how early-career researchers benefit 🎧⬇️ youtu.be/L5O2mDnqDUI?si…

The Night Science Podcast (@nightsciencepod) 's Twitter Profile Photo

New Night Science Podcast episode! Martin Schwartz from Yale University talks with us about the importance of stupidity in scientific research, how the ego can obstruct creativity, and how resilience, self-discovery, and the cultivation of "passionate indifference" – are key in science.

New Night Science Podcast episode! Martin Schwartz from <a href="/Yale/">Yale University</a> talks with us about the importance of stupidity in scientific research, how the ego can obstruct creativity, and how resilience, self-discovery, and the cultivation of "passionate indifference" – are key in science.
preLights (@prelights) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Another month, another CellBio #preList curated by preLighters 🙌Girish Kale Vibha Singh Felipe Del Valle et al. This month, most picks revolve around: Organelles & cell architecture Signalling & mechanosensing We read, we scout, you check it out! ⬇️ prelights.biologists.com/prelists/april…

Felipe Del Valle (@coffee_lipe) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Happy to share my latest preLights post ! prelights.biologists.com/highlights/syn… highlighting Vidhya Rangaraju, PhD 's lab work: a spine-mitochondrial ATP ratiometric reporter shows that synaptic activity triggers a rapid, sustained ATP boost in dendritic spines, fueled by local mitochondria 🧐

Luiza Jarovsky (@luizajarovsky) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🚨 New study reveals that when used to summarize scientific research, generative AI is nearly five times LESS accurate than humans. Many haven't realized, but Gen AI's accuracy problem is worse than initially thought.

🚨 New study reveals that when used to summarize scientific research, generative AI is nearly five times LESS accurate than humans.

Many haven't realized, but Gen AI's accuracy problem is worse than initially thought.
preLights (@prelights) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Reimagining peer review: new #spotLights episode discussing the Fast & Fair peer review initiative launched by Biology Open Dan Gorelick, Alejandra & Jonty Townson discuss early insights, now published as a #preprint, and how you can get involved. ⬇️🎧 youtu.be/mM6mZIubZaw

Rouskin Lab (@rouskinlab) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Isaac Newton recognized 350 YEARS AGO that scientific progress depends on building upon the discoveries of those who came before—Will we stand on the shoulders of giants—or let their legacy crumble beneath our feet? The answer will define not just American science, but America’s