Paper List
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Mapping of Lesion Images to Somatic Mutations
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of delayed genetic analysis in cancer diagnosis by predicting a patient's full somatic mutation profile d...
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Reinventing Clinical Dialogue: Agentic Paradigms for LLM‑Enabled Healthcare Communication
This paper addresses the core challenge of transforming reactive, stateless LLMs into autonomous, reliable clinical dialogue agents capable of longitu...
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Binary Latent Protein Fitness Landscapes for Quantum Annealing Optimization
通过将序列映射到二元潜在空间进行基于QUBO的适应度优化,桥接蛋白质表示学习和组合优化。
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Controlling Fish Schools via Reinforcement Learning of Virtual Fish Movement
证明了无模型强化学习可以利用虚拟视觉刺激有效引导鱼群,克服了缺乏精确行为模型的问题。
Cross-Species Transfer Learning for Electrophysiology-to-Transcriptomics Mapping in Cortical GABAergic Interneurons
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30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the challenge of predicting transcriptomic identity from electrophysiological recordings in human cortical interneurons, where limited labeled data and class imbalance hinder model performance.
核心创新
- Methodology Developed an attention-based BiLSTM that operates directly on structured IPFX feature-family representation (12 families, 498 features), eliminating the need for sparse PCA preprocessing and providing interpretable attention weights over feature families.
- Methodology Implemented a cross-species transfer learning framework with joint supervised training (shared encoder + two heads) followed by human-only fine-tuning, improving human macro-F1 by leveraging abundant mouse data (3,699 cells) to augment limited human data (506 cells).
- Biology Demonstrated conserved electrophysiological-to-transcriptomic mapping across species for GABAergic interneuron subclasses (Lamp5, Pvalb, Sst, Vip), enabling meaningful cross-species transfer despite biological and experimental distribution shifts.
主要结论
- Successfully replicated the Gouwens et al. (2020) baseline with random forest achieving 90.72% accuracy and 0.8728 macro-F1 on mouse data, confirming reproducibility of the electrophysiology-to-transcriptomics pipeline.
- The attention-based BiLSTM with SMOTE and ArcFace achieved 0.8923 macro-F1 on mouse data, matching feature-engineered baselines while providing interpretable attention weights over 12 electrophysiological feature families.
- Cross-species transfer learning (mouse pretraining + human fine-tuning) improved human macro-F1 compared to human-only training, demonstrating measurable gains despite distribution shifts and limited human sample size.
摘要: Single-cell electrophysiological recordings provide a powerful window into neuronal functional diversity and offer an interpretable route for linking intrinsic physiology to transcriptomic identity. Here, we replicate and extend the electrophysiology-to-transcriptomics framework introduced by Gouwens et al. (2020) using publicly available Allen Institute Patch-seq datasets from both mouse and human cortex. We focus on GABAergic inhibitory interneurons to target a subclass structure (Lamp5, Pvalb, Sst, Vip) that is comparable and conserved across species. After quality control, we analyzed 3,699 mouse visual cortex neurons and 506 human neocortical neurons from neurosurgical resections. Using standardized electrophysiological features and sparse PCA, we reproduced the major class-level separations reported in the original mouse study. For supervised prediction, a class-balanced random forest provided a strong feature-engineered baseline in mouse data and a reduced but still informative baseline in human data. We then developed an attention-based BiLSTM that operates directly on the structured IPFX feature-family representation, avoiding sPCA and providing feature-family-level interpretability via learned attention weights. Finally, we evaluated a cross-species transfer setting in which the sequence model is pretrained on mouse data and fine-tuned on human data for an aligned 4-class task, improving human macro-F1 relative to a human-only training baseline. Together, these results confirm reproducibility of the Gouwens pipeline in mouse data, demonstrate that sequence models can match feature-engineered baselines, and show that mouse-to-human transfer learning can provide measurable gains for human subclass prediction.