Jack Kosmicki
@jakphd.bsky.social
📤 360
📥 48
📝 64
Statistical geneticist @ Regeneron tweets are my own | he/him/his
reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Jeffrey Chupp
5 days ago
The No ICE in Minnesota is a fantastic deal. Lots of good video games and lots of physical games (TTRPG, etc) too!
itch.io/b/3484/no-ic...
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No ICE in Minnesota by jesthehuman and 651 others
No ICE in Minnesota: 1439 items for $10.00
https://itch.io/b/3484/no-ice-in-minnesota
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Jack Kosmicki
Caleb Lareau
17 days ago
Today in
@nature.com
, we describe how discarded reads in biobank-scale WGS can help resolve the genetic predictors and consequences of Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) infection. Wonderful working with
@ryandhindsa.bsky.social
@sherrynyeo.bsky.social
@erinmayc.bsky.social
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
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Population-scale sequencing resolves determinants of persistent EBV DNA - Nature
Population-scale WGS reveals genetic determinants of persistent EBV DNA, linking immune regulation—especially antigen processing and MHC class II variation—to EBV persistence and heterogeneous di...
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-10020-2#citeas
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Aaron Quinlan (he/him)
16 days ago
A new preprint from Peter Mchale and Michael Goldberg in my group on the latent biases inherent to current models of non-coding constraint.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
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The performance of genetic-constraint metrics varies significantly across the human noncoding genome
A longstanding goal in human genetics is to prioritize noncoding loci that, when disrupted, lead to developmental disorders and other Mendelian traits. In pursuit of this goal, multiple metrics have been developed to distinguish neutrally evolving sequences from those subjected to purifying selection. These metrics are commonly evaluated genome-wide, e.g., by computing a precision-recall curve on windows tiling the entire noncoding genome. Here, we identify parts of the noncoding genome where these metrics significantly underperform relative to their genome-wide performance due to "bias" in the underlying models of neutral genetic variation and/or a low "signal-to-noise ratio" in the genetic data. The most extreme effects are found for Gnocchi (Chen et al. 2024), the performance of which declines as GC content increases. We suggest annotating constraint scores of noncoding genomic intervals with robust measures of the bias of the corresponding model, allowing users to gauge confidence in those scores. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest. National Institutes of Health, R01HG012252
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.01.28.701168v1
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It's truly a sad state of affairs when it takes longer to pull GWAS sumstats out of the AllofUs research platform than it takes to generate them.
about 1 month ago
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Really nice work by
@nbaya.bsky.social
and co. showing that, as expected, individuals whose observed phenotype deviates from their genetically predicted trait are enriched for rare damaging variants in associated genes with said trait. Now to see if embryo selection companies pick up on this 😉
add a skeleton here at some point
about 1 month ago
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Sasha Gusev
2 months ago
I wrote about the bizarre case of Herasight, the embryo selection company going all in on eugenics.
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Embryo selection company Herasight goes all in on eugenics
...
https://open.substack.com/pub/theinfinitesimal/p/embryo-selection-company-herasight?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=web
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Jack Kosmicki
Kamil Slowikowski
2 months ago
You run a new command in
#rlang
#python
#bash
, and you don’t really know how long it should take. Will it be done in 30 seconds? 5 minutes? 45 minutes? Longer? 😫 An automatic notification might help to stay focused on
#programming
Let me introduce you to
ntfy.sh
slowkow.com/notes/ntfy/
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Get notifications on desktop and mobile from long-running jobs in your terminal sessions
If you’re like me, you get tired of waiting for long-running jobs in the terminal. You run a new command, and you don’t really know how long it should take to finish. Will it be done in 30 seconds? 5 ...
https://slowkow.com/notes/ntfy/
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Kevin Daly
2 months ago
Another
#aDNA
preprint! We recovered DNA from 7,000 year old (!) goat leather from Cueva de los Murciélagos - and see a genetic link with Bermeya goats today! Credit to Francisco Martínez-Sevilla for seeing me on Youtube(?!) + reaching out to collaborate - there's still value in the internet.
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Genetic analysis of 7,000 year old preserved goat leather from Cueva de los Murciélagos (Albuñol, Spain).
Advances in ancient DNA research have expanded the range of materials from which genetic information can be recovered, enabling the analysis of atypical materials. These often preserve both host and e...
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2025.12.01.691547v1#:~:text=Archaeozoological%20analyses%20show%20clear%20evidence,domestic%20goat%20of%20European%20ancestry
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Masahiro Kanai
3 months ago
Excited to share our new FinnGen single-nucleus multiome preprint! 🧬 We profiled ~10M PBMCs (snRNA-seq + snATAC-seq) from 1,108 Finnish donors to map how genetic variants drive complex disease through chromatin and gene regulation 🧵👇 🔗 Link:
www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...
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Jack Kosmicki
Sasha Gusev
3 months ago
Massive single-cell study by Kanai et al (
www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...
): - Once statistical power is high, constrained genes have more (though weaker) eQTLs. - Chromatin-QTLs near constrained genes have "normal" effect sizes, colocalize more with disease, but exhibit attenuated peak-gene effects.
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🚨Nearly all GWAS is done in adults - making inferences about genetic effects in children or child-specific traits/diseases impossible to know. A huge study of 80.6k Japanese children covering 1.1k GWASes (many for the first time) by is now out
www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...
3 months ago
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Great use of AI 🙄
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
3 months ago
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Yes, Boston's food scene is . . . underwhelming at best. The only restaurant to receive a ⭐️ was 311 Omakase - not the local favorites - Sarma, Oleana, Mooncusser, Nightshade Noodle Bar (which frankly are all massively overrated).
www.masslive.com/boston/2025/...
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Boston’s first-ever Michelin Guide revealed: See which restaurants made it
The Michelin Guide has officially revealed which restaurants in Boston are worthy of its prestigious honor.
https://www.masslive.com/boston/2025/11/michelin-guide-reveals-boston-selections-for-the-first-time-full-list-here.html
3 months ago
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Kevin Daly
3 months ago
Our paper on imputation of ancient goat genomes is now available at GBE - congratulations to
@jolijnerven.bsky.social
#aDNA
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Inferring Domestic Goat Demographic History Through Ancient Genome Imputation
Abstract. Goats were among the earliest managed animals, making them a natural model to explore the genetic consequences of domestication. However, a chall
https://academic.oup.com/gbe/article-abstract/doi/10.1093/gbe/evaf181/8317779?utm_source=advanceaccess&utm_campaign=gbe&utm_medium=email
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🚨I did my PhD at Harvard and it fundamentally shaped who I am today. It's extremely sad to see their PhD admission cuts for the next 2 years. - Science ⬇️75% - Arts & Humanities ⬇️60% - Social Sciences ⬇️50–70% - History ⬇️60% - Org. & Evo. Bio. ⬇️75% - German ⬇️100%
www.thecrimson.com/article/2025...
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Harvard FAS Cuts Ph.D. Seats By More Than Half Across Next Two Admissions Cycles | News | The Harvard Crimson
The Faculty of Arts and Sciences slashed the number of Ph.D. student admissions slots for the Science division by more than 75 percent and for the Arts & Humanities division by about 60 percent for th...
https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2025/10/21/fas-phd-admissions-cuts/
4 months ago
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Jack Kosmicki
FinnGen
4 months ago
Just in time for
#ASHG2025
, a new FinnGen public data release is live! This release features the first clinical laboratory value association results. Analyses cover 383 lab measurements (OMOPIDs) with data from ≥1,000 participants each. Access the results here:
www.finngen.fi/en/access_re...
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Jack Kosmicki
FinnGen
4 months ago
We’re getting ready for an exciting week at
#ASHG2025
in Boston! Come meet the FinnGen team at booth 147 - we’ll be sharing updates and showcasing new public resources and tools. Plus, don’t miss the various presentations featuring FinnGen results across the program!
www.finngen.fi/en/meet-finn...
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Meet FinnGen at the ASHG 2025! | FinnGen
Results based on the FinnGen data are presented in almost 40 talks or posters during the 2025 Annual Meeting of the American Society of Human Genetics (ASHG) in Boston, October 14-18. We also have a b...
https://www.finngen.fi/en/meet-finngen-ashg-2025
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Jack Kosmicki
Pragati Kore
4 months ago
📃 We’re excited to share our latest work, now published in Nature Communications — a major update to the Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD) that improves allele frequency resolution for two gnomAD-defined genetic ancestry groups using local ancestry inference (LAI).
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Improved allele frequencies in gnomAD through local ancestry inference - Nature Communications
This study incorporates local ancestry into the Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD) to improve allele frequency estimates for admixed populations, enhancing variant interpretation and enabling more accurate and equitable genomic research and clinical care.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-63340-2
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Kevin Daly
5 months ago
Very happy to see our pre-print on ancient Irish goat genetics on bioRxiv
#aDNA
#spiergorm
I want to acknowledge this was only possible through the work of the late Dr. Judith Findlater, along with Prof. Eileen Murphy at
@qubelfastofficial.bsky.social
.
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Old Goats: 3,000 years of genetic connectivity of the domestic goat in Ireland
The domestic goat likely first arrived to the island of Ireland as part of the introduction of agriculture approximately 5,900 years ago, and remains a part of the island's biocultural heritage. Howev...
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.09.26.678852v1
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Jolijn Erven
5 months ago
Interested in goats 🐐? Read our pre-print on ancient Irish goats and their connection to the Old Irish goat breed Just look at this dashing individual, courtesy of the Old Irish Goat society
add a skeleton here at some point
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Jack Kosmicki
Kamil Slowikowski
5 months ago
I'd like to announce the medRxiv preprint of our latest work: A multimodal atlas of COVID-19 severity identifies hallmarks of dysregulated immunity.
www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...
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Kristin Tsuo,
@genetisaur.bsky.social
, & Mark Daly just wrote the best proteomics paper I've read. They convincingly show how smoking and alcohol (aka, the environment) dramatically influences proteomics data. Some 🤯 results 1) proteomics predicts frequency (5a) & quanity (5b) of alcohol consumed
5 months ago
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Kevin Daly
5 months ago
I will be recruiting two PhDs for my ERC Project HERDPATH - let's discover out how livestock and pathogens evolved together using
#aDNA
. Projects will be animal or pathogen focused but will be in dialogue. Details at my quaint website below. Deadline 3rd October.
kevingdaly.github.io
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Ruminant Palaeogenomics - Kevin G. Daly: Ruminant Palaeogenomics
https://kevingdaly.github.io
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Kevin Daly
5 months ago
Second craziest thing you'll read today: from 2026 I will be leading an
@erc.europa.eu
Starter Grant project. HERDPATH will explore how livestock and their pathogens co-evolved during the last 10,000 years. PhD advertisements to come! Press release below with one of the few good photos of me.
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| UCD Research
https://www.ucd.ie/research/news/2025/fourucdresearchersreceiveercstartinggrantsforgroundbreakingresearchprojects/body,844190,en.html
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😂 A WashU professor embezzled $412k and used the money to buy . . . *checks notes* . . . collectible trading cards
www.justice.gov/usao-edmo/pr...
6 months ago
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Kevin Daly
6 months ago
Shameless promotion from
#isba11
- I'll be hiring PhDs to start early 2026 (plus postdocs starting later), using
#adna
to study livestock and pathogen coevolution, particularly looking at inbreeding and immune gene evolution! Contact me at kevin[at]palaeome.org, full ad to come. Please share!
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Kevin Mitchell
7 months ago
As for other fields, like human genetics and neuroimaging, it is clear that small, under-powered studies (often with uncorrected stats and no replication sample) JUST GENERATE NOISE.
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A tale of two DTC DNA companies. While 23andMe is dealing with the bankruptcy fallout, Ancestry is sponsoring Ryan Reynolds' and Rob McElhenney's Welsh football club, Wrexham AFC. PS: I loved watching Welcome to Wrexham ❤️
www.wrexhamafc.co.uk/news/2025/ju...
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COMMERCIAL | Ancestry Confirmed as Wrexham AFC Official Club Partner
Wrexham AFC are pleased to announce Ancestry as our new official family history partner, with the company’s brand to feature on the front of our new 2025/26 training wear – as worn for the first time ...
https://www.wrexhamafc.co.uk/news/2025/july/07/commercial---ancestry-wrexham-afc/
7 months ago
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In the latest update to the 23andMe, Anne Wojcicki (i.e., not REGN) won the bidding war.
www.wsj.com/tech/biotech...
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Exclusive | Anne Wojcicki Wins Bidding for 23andMe
Regeneron is backing away from buying the DNA-testing company after a nonprofit controlled by co-founder Wojcicki made a higher bid.
https://www.wsj.com/tech/biotech/anne-wojcicki-wins-bidding-for-23andme-92dcfd5b
8 months ago
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Year ago, the prevailing attitude was that deep learning would significantly improve polygenic risk scores (or anything else, to be fair). A rather important set of negative results indicating that isn't the case (though I imagine many will still try).
nature.com/articles/s41...
8 months ago
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Whelp, the sale was premature. Former CEO, Anne Wojcicki, reopened the 23andMe auction with a new $305 million bid.
www.bloomberg.com/news/article...
add a skeleton here at some point
8 months ago
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Jack Kosmicki
Peter Gleick
9 months ago
There are 2 previous historical cases of countries destroying their science and universities, crippling them for decades: Lysenkoism in the USSR and Nazi Germany. The Trump administration will be the 3rd. It's not just budgets but research, institutions, expertise, and training the next generation.
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Jack Kosmicki
David Pfau
9 months ago
The war on science in the US is already having an effect on private sector research like AlphaFold. Bears repeating but the private sector builds on top of things created by academic research for the public good. This hurts everyone.
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Jack Kosmicki
Brent Richards
9 months ago
I didn't have much hope that we'd find genetic determinants of long-COVID, but after years of work, Vilma Aho, Tomoko Nakanisha, Hugo Zeberg and Hanna Ollila made it happen! (Among a few others :-))
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
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Genome-wide association study of long COVID - Nature Genetics
A genome-wide study by the Long COVID Host Genetics Initiative identifies an association between the FOXP4 locus and long COVID, implicating altered lung function in its pathophysiology.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41588-025-02100-w
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Congrats to everyone involved in the long COVID GWAS - diligence and perseverance paid off with an association near FOXP4 that increases risk (OR=1.63; P=1.76e-10).
nature.com/articles/s41...
9 months ago
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Wow, Regeneron bought 23andMe for $256 million.
www.cnn.com/2025/05/19/b...
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Regeneron to buy bankrupt DNA testing firm 23andMe for $256 million | CNN Business
Drugmaker Regeneron Pharmaceuticals will buy genetic testing firm 23andMe for $256 million through a bankruptcy auction, the companies said Monday.
https://www.cnn.com/2025/05/19/business/regeneron-23-and-me
9 months ago
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🤯Wow, Kári Stefánsson stepped down from deCODE - end of an era.
www.ruv.is/english/2025...
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Kári Stefánsson steps down as CEO of deCODE genetics - RÚV.is
RÚV.is
https://www.ruv.is/english/2025-05-02-kari-stefansson-steps-down-as-ceo-of-decode-genetics-442704
9 months ago
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
James Pirruccello 🌉
10 months ago
Nobody who has ever played Civ or SimCity would misunderstand trade this badly.
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Carl Sagan was really ahead of his time. Absolutely prescient quote from one of his final interviews.
10 months ago
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It's incredible how far we have come from saturated mutagenesis of 1 gene (BRCA) in 2018 to now 500 protein domains.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
10 months ago
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As the topic of batch covariates from sequencing data came up recently, here was a fun little look at differences in read depth by DNA source (blood or saliva) and sequencing center in All of Us. It often isn't a bad idea to include batch covariates to account for some of these differences!
10 months ago
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Andrea Love, PhD | Biomedical Scientist
10 months ago
Breast cancer diagnoses rose by over 300% between 1973 and 1992. Was there a breast cancer epidemic?! NO. Mammograms were implemented for screening in 1976. PREVALENCE is a function of being able to correctly diagnose something. This is also about autism.
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Wow, they even scrapped my papers - must have been desperate for data 😅
add a skeleton here at some point
10 months ago
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My job might be DOOMed to fail, but I certainly got a laugh out of it 😆 I love it when programmer's have a sense of humor (in this case, the people behind Cromshell).
10 months ago
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This is by far the best take on the dire wolves I've heard yet.
add a skeleton here at some point
10 months ago
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Andy Pekosz
11 months ago
I got the news this morning on two COVID related grants that were being terminated because its no longer seen as a research priority by Health and Human Services. My people have been given their notice. I have no words to express my feelings.
www.nbcnews.com/health/healt...
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CDC is pulling back $11B in Covid funding sent to health departments across the U.S.
“Now that the pandemic is over, the grants and cooperative agreements are no longer necessary," federal health authorities wrote to funding recipients this week.
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/cdc-pulling-back-11b-covid-funding-sent-health-departments-us-rcna198006
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23andMe files for bankruptcy 😬
investors.23andme.com/news-release...
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https://investors.23andme.com/news-releases/news-release-details/23andme-initiates-voluntary-chapter-11-process-maximize
11 months ago
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Mallory Harris, PhD
12 months ago
In his confirmation hearing now, Bhattacharya was asked by Senator Cassidy whether he thinks there's a need for NIH to study the myth that vaccines cause autism. Bhattacharya says he doesn't believe there's a link, but leaves door open to wasting taxpayer money & scientists' time relitigating this.
add a skeleton here at some point
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Jack Kosmicki
Dr Gareth Hawkes
12 months ago
Really excited to share our next population-scale WGS work preprint. Here, we analyse three anthropometric traits in nearly 700,000 individuals (discovery UKB ~450K, replication AoU). We show, for these traits, that common and rare variant heritability is convergent
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
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Whole-genome sequencing analysis of anthropometric traits in 672,976 individuals reveals convergence between rare and common genetic associations
Genetic association studies have mostly focussed on common variants from genotyping arrays or rare protein-coding variants from exome sequencing. Here, we used whole-genome sequence (WGS) data in 672,...
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.02.24.639925v1
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reposted by
Jack Kosmicki
Garrett M. Graff
12 months ago
American institutions—from the media to Congress—continue to underreact to the unraveling of our democracy. Overseas our media would not hesitate to call what we’re living through a full-blown autocratic coup. Here's my attempt at the story they should write:
www.doomsdayscenario.co/p/musk-trump...
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Musk, Trump Establish New Era of Kleptocracy in America
A third dispatch comparing how the US media would cover this moment if it was happening overseas
https://www.doomsdayscenario.co/p/musk-trump-establish-new-era-of-kleptocracy-in-america
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