Network theory

Human disease network

A human disease network is a network of human disorders and diseases with reference to their genetic origins or other features. More specifically, it is the map of human disease associations referring mostly to disease genes. For example, in a human disease network, two diseases are linked if they share at least one associated gene. A typical human disease network usually derives from bipartite networks which consist of both diseases and genes information. Additionally, some human disease networks use other features such as symptoms and proteins to associate diseases. (Wikipedia).

Human disease network
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Science Bulletins: Genes and Health—Moving Beyond Race

Many diseases have both genetic and environmental causes. Scientists often take traditional racial boundaries into account when researching why certain populations seem predisposed to certain diseases. But work on asthma at the University of California--San Francisco is going beyond curren

From playlist Science Bulletins

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Human Body 101 | National Geographic

How does the human body work? What roles do the digestive, reproductive, and other systems play? Learn about human anatomy and the complex processes that help your body function. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe About National Geographic: National Geographic is the world's premi

From playlist News | National Geographic

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Are Human Beings A Disease?

“Human beings are a disease, a cancer of this planet; you are a plague.” Is that true? Are we really spreading in the same way as viruses, causing damage to everything we touch?  Could the argument that humanity is a virus spreading worldwide be based on a mere analogy? It is somewhat t

From playlist Myth or Fact?

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Age of Networks

Jennifer Tour Chayes (Microsoft Research New England and Microsoft Research New York City) URL: https://www.icts.res.in/lecture/4/details/1644/ Description: Everywhere we turn these days, we find that networks can be used to describe relevant interactions.In the high tech world, we see th

From playlist Distinguished Lectures

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In the Company of Scholars Lecture Series: "Using Social Networks for Good"

Human beings choose their friends, neighbors, and co-workers, and we inherit our relatives; and each of the people to whom we are connected also does the same, such that, in the end, we humans assemble ourselves into vast, face-to-face social networks. These networks are the human equivale

From playlist In The Company Of Scholars

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An Introduction to Infectious Diseases | The Dynamic World of Infectious Disease

The ocean-crossing Ebola outbreak of 2014 hit the entire world so quickly and so close to home that the CDC's protective gear guidelines and the course of drug development were changed forever. Infectious disease spreads more quickly around a globalized Earth. Stay safe—not scared—and get

From playlist Biology and Health

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How The Immune System ACTUALLY Works – IMMUNE

To preorder IMMUNE click here: https://kgs.link/ImmuneBook –– It’s available in English and German and at online retailers it should be available in pretty much all countries too. Sources & further reading: https://sites.google.com/view/sources-immunesystemexplained/ The human immune sys

From playlist Medicine & Biology

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Neural Network Overview

This lecture gives an overview of neural networks, which play an important role in machine learning today. Book website: http://databookuw.com/ Steve Brunton's website: eigensteve.com

From playlist Intro to Data Science

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CS224W: Machine Learning with Graphs | 2021 | Lecture 18 - GNNs in Computational Biology

For more information about Stanford’s Artificial Intelligence professional and graduate programs, visit: https://stanford.io/2XVImFC Lecture 18 - Graph Neural Networks in Computational Biology Jure Leskovec Computer Science, PhD We are glad to invite Prof. Marinka Zitnik from Harvard Un

From playlist Stanford CS224W: Machine Learning with Graphs

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Olga Troyanskaya, Princeton University - Stanford Medicine Big Data | Precision Health 2016

Bringing together thought leaders in large-scale data analysis and technology to transform the way we diagnose, treat and prevent disease. Visit our website at http://bigdata.stanford.edu/.

From playlist Big Data in Biomedicine: Enabling Precision Health Conference 2016

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Daphne Koller: Biomedicine and Machine Learning | Lex Fridman Podcast #93

Daphne Koller is a professor of computer science at Stanford University, a co-founder of Coursera with Andrew Ng and Founder and CEO of insitro, a company at the intersection of machine learning and biomedicine. Support this podcast by signing up with these sponsors: - Cash App - use code

From playlist AI talks

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Eddie interviews Po-Shen Loh (3 of 3: Fighting a pandemic with mathematics)

Find out more about the NOVID app: https://www.novid.org Watch part 1, "Discovering a love for mathematics": https://youtu.be/B2Z19_M_v9M Watch part 2, "Life as a mathematician": https://youtu.be/xXs2eXnnGmI More resources available at www.misterwootube.com

From playlist Interviews & Media

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Strata RX 2012 - Eric Schadt Keynote - Wednesday 10/17/1

Integrating large-scale, high-dimensional molecular and physiological data holds promise in not only defining the molecular networks that directly respond to genetic and environmental perturbations that associate with disease, but in causally associating such networks with the physiologica

From playlist Strata Rx

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2. Accessing and Modulating Brain Circuitry in Freely Moving Human Subjects with Parkinson's

Dr. Helen Bronte-Stewart is the John E Cahill Family Professor in the department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences at Stanford give a talk about recent advances in wearable physiosensors and sensing neurostimulators which are enabling us to study the brain’s effect on Parkinson’s dise

From playlist Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute

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The Emergence of Proactive P4 Medicine: A Revolution in Healthcare - Leroy Hood

Dr. Leroy Hood with the Institute of Systems Biology will focus on their efforts at taking a systems approach to diseases—looking at a neurodegenerative (prion) disease, PTSD and a brain tumor (glioblastoma) in mice and humans. The mouse models allows them to analyze the initiation and pro

From playlist Strata Rx

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Francis Crick Prize Lecture 2016 by Dr Madan Babu Mohan

Unstructured proteins: cellular complexity and human diseases If DNA is the blueprint of life, proteins are the building blocks. Research over the last century has shown that the shapes adopted by proteins determine their functions. Mutations that affect their shapes cause human diseases.

From playlist Latest talks and lectures

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Univers Convergents 2015 - séance 4/6 - "Contagion"

Retrouvez en vidéo tous les débats du ciné-club "Univers Convergents, Sciences, Fictions, Sociétés". Séance du Mardi 28 avril 2015 - 19h30 « Comment la société s’organise-t-elle pour gérer une pandémie ? » Un débat en présence de : Marc Barthélémy, mathématicien, Didier Houssin, membre de

From playlist Ciné-Club Univers Convergents

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IMS Public Lecture: Real People, Virtual Worlds: Watching a Plague Unfold

Nina Fefferman, Rutgers University and Tufts University, USA

From playlist Public Lectures

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A Level Biology Revision "Communicable Diseases and Pathogens"

In this video, we look at communicable diseases and pathogens. First I explain what is meant by a communicable disease and by a pathogen. I then look at the features of four categories of pathogens: bacteria, viruses, fungi and proctoctista (which are also called protista). Image credits:

From playlist A Level Biology "Infectious Diseases and the Immune System"

Related pages

Network medicine | Bipartite graph | Disease | Network theory