greentea387
greentea387 t1_j0opa6j wrote
Reply to When AI automates all the jobs what are you going to do with your life? by TrainquilOasis1423
Find enlightenment
greentea387 OP t1_iw6bup7 wrote
Reply to comment by -ZeroRelevance- in Shape of a protein predicted by two different AI models (ESMFold on the left, AlphaFold on the right) by greentea387
Sorry, I am not aware of such a protein
greentea387 OP t1_iw2gmao wrote
Reply to comment by draem in Shape of a protein predicted by two different AI models (ESMFold on the left, AlphaFold on the right) by greentea387
I don't think so for this protein
greentea387 OP t1_iw2g7mz wrote
Reply to Shape of a protein predicted by two different AI models (ESMFold on the left, AlphaFold on the right) by greentea387
ESMFold by Meta and AlphaFold by Google's DeepMind
Model Confidence:
dark blue: Very high (pLDDT > 90)
light blue: Confident (90 > pLDDT > 70)
yellow: Low (70 > pLDDT > 50)
orange: Very low (pLDDT < 50)
Protein: Serotonin receptor 2beta
Organism: Gryllus bimaculatus
Protein Sequence: EQKATKVLGVVFFTFVVLWAPFFVLNLVPTVCGEECERRIDHRVFDFVTWLGYASSMVNPIFYTIFNKVFRQAFKKVLTCQYRKKVWRPPA
greentea387 t1_j3he808 wrote
Reply to Any hope for future therapies on Neural Regeneration/Brain Injury Repair? by 94746382926
Hey, I also suffered brain damage. I agree with what the others answered, but I would like to add that it is very helpful to really get deep into the topic and figure out the exact mechanism that is causing your problem. Like, what are the neural mechanisms underlying brain damage-induced functional deficits? What exact molecular challenges need to be overcome in order to restore function? Why is it currently not possible?
I find that addressing questions like these in as much detail as possible can provide much better insight into the nature of the problem and help you assess the impact of upcoming research. Like when you read something in the news saying "brain damage is now curable (study x has found y)" then you are in a much better position to discern what that actually means for your condition.
I recommend the book "Principles of Neural Science". It's expensive but there are always ways to get the PDF for free :)