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Deargen Announces New Model of Optimizing Drug Candidate Molecules With Enhanced Performance by Nearly Double Compared to Existing Models

Published: Apr 09, 2021   At ACM CHIL 2021, the company presented study results on a model of simultaneously optimizing multiple properties of molecules with enhanced performance by nearly double compared to models of Google-Stanford University and MIT It can be used for optimizing molecule design in pre-clinical and clinical stage   SEOUL, South Korea (BUSINESS WIRE) Deargen, an artificial intelligence (AI)-based drug discovery and development biotech company, announced on April 9 that it presented study results on controlled molecule generator (CMG) technology at the ACM Conference on Health, Inference and Learning (ACM CHIL) 2021. The CMG technology can optimize multiple properties of molecules simultaneously.

Cypher VI, William & Mary s student-run hackathon, is all online for 2021

Photo - of - by Joseph McClain |  April 7, 2021 Cypher VI, the 2021 version of William & Mary’s student-run hackathon is set for April 9-11 – and it’s entirely online. Victor Tran ’23 says he expects to have around 220 people participate in the event. In recent years, William & Mary hackathons have seen scads of young coders gathered together in Swem Library. Tran, the lead organizer of Cypher VI, says the online version encourages a wider range of participants. “Now that it’s all virtual, a lot of people from outside of Virginia can sign up,” he said. “We have people who have registered from as far away as India.”

Smartphone camera can help doctors measure pulse, breathing rate

Washington, April 4 (IANS) Researchers have developed a method that uses the camera on a person s smartphone or computer to take their pulse and respiration signal from a real-time video of their face. The development comes at a time when telehealth has become a critical way for doctors to provide health care while minimising in-person contact during COVID-19. The University of Washington-led team s system uses machine learning to capture subtle changes in how light reflects off a person s face, which is correlated with changing blood flow. Then it converts these changes into both pulse and respiration rate. The researchers presented the system in December at the Neural Information Processing Systems conference.

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