6 results match your criteria: "Canadian Institute for Advanced Research Toronto[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • Neural network pruning helps make computer models faster and cheaper to run while trying to keep their accuracy high.
  • There are different ways to prune, like removing specific parts (fine pruning) or bigger pieces (coarse pruning), and we tested how well these methods work on different types of image tasks.
  • We found that fine pruning is better at keeping accuracy compared to coarse pruning, especially when it comes to using the networks efficiently.
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AlphaFold accelerates artificial intelligence powered drug discovery: efficient discovery of a novel CDK20 small molecule inhibitor.

Chem Sci

February 2023

Insilico Medicine Shanghai Ltd Suite 901, Tower C, Changtai Plaza, 2889 Jinke Road. Pudong New District Shanghai 201203 China

The application of artificial intelligence (AI) has been considered a revolutionary change in drug discovery and development. In 2020, the AlphaFold computer program predicted protein structures for the whole human genome, which has been considered a remarkable breakthrough in both AI applications and structural biology. Despite the varying confidence levels, these predicted structures could still significantly contribute to structure-based drug design of novel targets, especially the ones with no or limited structural information.

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Numerous challenges in science and engineering can be framed as optimization tasks, including the maximization of reaction yields, the optimization of molecular and materials properties, and the fine-tuning of automated hardware protocols. Design of experiment and optimization algorithms are often adopted to solve these tasks efficiently. Increasingly, these experiment planning strategies are coupled with automated hardware to enable autonomous experimental platforms.

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Metagenomic analysis reveals that modern microbialites and polar microbial mats have similar taxonomic and functional potential.

Front Microbiol

October 2015

Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada ; Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada ; Department of Botany, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada ; Canadian Institute for Advanced Research Toronto, ON, Canada.

Within the subarctic climate of Clinton Creek, Yukon, Canada, lies an abandoned and flooded open-pit asbestos mine that harbors rapidly growing microbialites. To understand their formation we completed a metagenomic community profile of the microbialites and their surrounding sediments. Assembled metagenomic data revealed that bacteria within the phylum Proteobacteria numerically dominated this system, although the relative abundances of taxa within the phylum varied among environments.

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Combining genomic sequencing methods to explore viral diversity and reveal potential virus-host interactions.

Front Microbiol

April 2015

Department of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada ; Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada ; Integrated Microbial Biodiversity Program, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research Toronto, ON, Canada ; Department of Botany, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada.

Viral diversity and virus-host interactions in oxygen-starved regions of the ocean, also known as oxygen minimum zones (OMZs), remain relatively unexplored. Microbial community metabolism in OMZs alters nutrient and energy flow through marine food webs, resulting in biological nitrogen loss and greenhouse gas production. Thus, viruses infecting OMZ microbes have the potential to modulate community metabolism with resulting feedback on ecosystem function.

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High temporal and spatial diversity in marine RNA viruses implies that they have an important role in mortality and structuring plankton communities.

Front Microbiol

January 2015

Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada ; Departments of Botany, and Microbiology & Immunology, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada ; Canadian Institute for Advanced Research Toronto, ON, Canada.

Viruses in the order Picornavirales infect eukaryotes, and are widely distributed in coastal waters. Amplicon deep-sequencing of the RNA dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) revealed diverse and highly uneven communities of picorna-like viruses in the coastal waters of British Columbia (BC), Canada. Almost 300 000 pyrosequence reads revealed 145 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) based on 95% sequence similarity at the amino-acid level.

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