scholarly journals TP63 mutation mapping information in TP63 mutation-associated syndromes

Author(s):  
Yosuke Harazono ◽  
Kei-ichi Morita ◽  
Erina Tonouchi ◽  
Eri Anzai ◽  
Namiaki Takahara ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (15) ◽  
pp. eabe4166
Author(s):  
Philippe Schwaller ◽  
Benjamin Hoover ◽  
Jean-Louis Reymond ◽  
Hendrik Strobelt ◽  
Teodoro Laino

Humans use different domain languages to represent, explore, and communicate scientific concepts. During the last few hundred years, chemists compiled the language of chemical synthesis inferring a series of “reaction rules” from knowing how atoms rearrange during a chemical transformation, a process called atom-mapping. Atom-mapping is a laborious experimental task and, when tackled with computational methods, requires continuous annotation of chemical reactions and the extension of logically consistent directives. Here, we demonstrate that Transformer Neural Networks learn atom-mapping information between products and reactants without supervision or human labeling. Using the Transformer attention weights, we build a chemically agnostic, attention-guided reaction mapper and extract coherent chemical grammar from unannotated sets of reactions. Our method shows remarkable performance in terms of accuracy and speed, even for strongly imbalanced and chemically complex reactions with nontrivial atom-mapping. It provides the missing link between data-driven and rule-based approaches for numerous chemical reaction tasks.


Leonardo ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 261-268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Kirschenbaum

This paper documents an interactive graphics installation entitled Lucid Mapping and Codex Transformissions in the Z-Buffer. Lucid Mapping uses the Virtual Reality Modeling Language to explore textual and narrative possibilities within three-dimensional (3D) electronic environments. The author describes the creative rationale and technical design of the work and places it within the context of other applications of 3D text and typography in the digital arts and the scientific visualization communities. The author also considers the implications of 3D textual environments on visual language and communication, and discriminates among a range of different visual/ rhetorical strategies that such environments can sustain.


2008 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 181-197 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Yang ◽  
Amanda Lo ◽  
Robert Steele

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to address problems that exist in the context of XML to ontology translation. Existing research results dealing with XML to ontology translation do not facilitate bidirectional data translation due to the fundamental differences between XML schema and ontologies. This paper proposes a mapping representation ontology for modeling concept mappings defined between XML schema and ontology, enabling data translation without any information loss.Design/methodology/approachA two‐step compensation approach is proposed that aims to prevent the loss of data type, structural and relational information during any single trip data translation. The mapping representation ontology proposed is capable in capturing enough information to compensate the loss of information during translation, hence allowing bidirectional conversions between XML and ontology.FindingsFundamental differences between XML schema and ontology are identified as the main reason causing the loss of information during data translation. A compensation approach that captures a sufficient amount of concept mapping information data translation is found to be successful in enabling lossless data transformation.Practical implicationsOutcomes from this work allow for the seamless data translation between XML documents, it demonstrates how web applications can seamlessly communicate and exchange data with each other without the need to conform to a predefined data standard. This paper aims to enhance interoperability between distributed systems.Originality/valueThis paper presents a mapping ontology that captures concept mappings defined between XML schema and ontology. Two algorithms facilitating the bidirectional XML to ontology translation are also proposed.


Author(s):  
Mousumi Bhattacharya ◽  
Christopher Huntley

Recent developments in social network mapping software have opened up new opportunities for human resource management (HRM). In this chapter we discuss how social network mapping information may provide critical inputs to managers for increasing the effectiveness of their HRM programs.


Author(s):  
Lawrence Chung ◽  
Panagiotis Katalagarianos ◽  
Manolis Marakakis ◽  
Michalis Mertikas ◽  
John Mylopoulos ◽  
...  

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