Paper List
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A Theoretical Framework for the Formation of Large Animal Groups: Topological Coordination, Subgroup Merging, and Velocity Inheritance
This paper addresses the core problem of how large, coordinated animal groups form in nature, challenging the classical view of gradual aggregation by...
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CONFIDE: Hallucination Assessment for Reliable Biomolecular Structure Prediction and Design
This paper addresses the critical limitation of current protein structure prediction models (like AlphaFold3) where high-confidence scores (pLDDT) can...
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Generative design and validation of therapeutic peptides for glioblastoma based on a potential target ATP5A
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck in therapeutic peptide design: how to efficiently optimize lead peptides with geometric constraints while...
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Pharmacophore-based design by learning on voxel grids
This paper addresses the computational bottleneck and limited novelty in conventional pharmacophore-based virtual screening by introducing a voxel cap...
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Human-Centred Evaluation of Text-to-Image Generation Models for Self-expression of Mental Distress: A Dataset Based on GPT-4o
This paper addresses the critical gap in evaluating how AI-generated images can effectively support cross-cultural mental distress communication, part...
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ANNE Apnea Paper
This paper addresses the core challenge of achieving accurate, event-level sleep apnea detection and characterization using a non-intrusive, multimoda...
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DeeDeeExperiment: Building an infrastructure for integrating and managing omics data analysis results in R/Bioconductor
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of managing and organizing the growing volume of differential expression and functional enrichment analys...
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Cross-Species Antimicrobial Resistance Prediction from Genomic Foundation Models
This paper addresses the core challenge of predicting antimicrobial resistance across phylogenetically distinct bacterial species, where traditional m...
Bayesian Inference in Epidemic Modelling: A Beginner’s Guide Illustrated with the SIR Model
PhD Mathematics
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This guide addresses the core challenge of estimating uncertain epidemiological parameters (like transmission and recovery rates) from noisy, real-world outbreak data by providing a clear, applied pathway using Bayesian inference and MCMC.
核心创新
- Methodology Presents an integrated, pedagogical pipeline from the SIR ODE model through Bayesian likelihood formulation to practical MCMC implementation, demystifying the process for beginners.
- Methodology Explicitly connects the Gaussian noise assumption in the likelihood to the common least-squares fitting approach, framing Bayesian inference as its natural probabilistic extension with uncertainty quantification.
- Theory Emphasizes the interpretative power of the full posterior distribution and credible intervals over single point estimates, highlighting this as the key advantage for decision-making under uncertainty.
主要结论
- In a synthetic example with true parameters β=0.3, γ=0.1 (R0=3.0), MCMC recovered posterior means of β=0.300 (std 0.002) and γ=0.102 (std 0.001), demonstrating accurate and precise inference.
- The posterior distribution for R0 was estimated as 2.95 with a standard deviation of 0.03, showing the method successfully quantifies uncertainty in this critical epidemiological metric.
- The framework successfully separates the roles of individual parameters β and γ, showing that different pairs can yield the same R0 but produce distinct epidemic curve shapes (e.g., peak sharpness), which point estimates alone would miss.
摘要: This guide provides a beginner-friendly introduction to Bayesian inference in the context of epidemic modeling, using the classic Susceptible-Infected-Recovered (SIR) model as a working example. It covers the mathematical setup of the SIR ordinary differential equations, the formulation of the Bayesian inference problem (likelihood and prior specification), and the implementation of Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) via the Metropolis-Hastings algorithm to estimate transmission (β) and recovery (γ) rates from noisy outbreak data. The tutorial emphasizes the conceptual advantages of the Bayesian framework—which provides full posterior distributions quantifying parameter uncertainty—over frequentist point estimates, and walks through a complete synthetic example with results and interpretation.