Welcome to: The human race into space will require kidneys
Agenda and Minutes
1. Announcements
- We will continue to meet weekly.
2. Updates/status reports
- Women in space analysis.
3. Reading and discussion
- Readings: kidneys or space, depending on interest and attendance.
- Kidneys: we read up to the last paragraph in Section 5, and can start there next time. We also may want to review the appendices (we can evaluate whether to do that). Source: https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/9/2/572.
- Space: evaluate what to read next!
- We
could do another documentation related to the astronauts analysis.
One would be
https://planet4589.org/space/astro/web/missions.html, describing https://planet4589.org/space/astro/lists/missions.html.
- We once started: https://www.newthingsunderthesun.com/pub/4xnyepnn/release/9. We read up to "In their paper, firms use these technologies to produce a fixed amount of output every period."
- https://towardsdatascience.com/understanding-auc-roc-curve-68b2303cc9c5 might be good to read at some point. We could evaluate that.
- Attendees could suggest possible readings/viewings between now and next time, or we could take time now for each person to search for things and report back.
- Kidney articles we could evaluate later as needed:
- Deep learning-based classification of kidney transplant pathology: a retrospective, multicentre, proof-of-concept study,
- Jesper Kers*, Roman D Bülow*, Barbara M Klinkhammer, Gerben E Breimer, Francesco Fontana, Adeyemi Adefidipe Abiola, Rianne Hofstraat, Garry L Corthals, Hessel Peters-Sengers, Sonja Djudjaj, Saskia von Stillfried, David L Hölscher, Tobias T Pieters, Arjan D van Zuilen, Frederike J Bemelman, Azam S Nurmohamed, Maarten Naesens, Joris J T H Roelofs, Sandrine Florquin, Jürgen Floege, Tri Q Nguyen, Jakob N Kather†, Peter Boor†, C:\Users\jdberleant\Dropbox\research\healthInformatics\JeongHoonShin\papersToSuggestForNoonResearchGroup\PIIS2589750021002119.pdf
- The Ensembles of Machine Learning Methods for Survival Predicting after Kidney Transplantation Yaroslav Tolstyak 1,2, Rostyslav Zhuk 3, Igor Yakovlev 2, Nataliya Shakhovska 4, Michal Gregus ml 5, Valentyna Chopyak 1 and Nataliia Melnykova 4, C:\Users\jdberleant\Dropbox\research\healthInformatics\JeongHoonShin\papersToSuggestForNoonResearchGroup\applsci-11-10380.pdf.
- Artificial intelligence and kidney transplantation, Nurhan Seyahi, Seyda Gul Ozcan, C:\Users\jdberleant\Dropbox\research\healthInformatics\JeongHoonShin\papersToSuggestForNoonResearchGroup\WJT-11-277.pdf
- Here are some generic questions about articles (and videos):
- What is the source?
- What is the most significant advance in the human knowledge presented in the paper?
- Why is that advance important?
- What important questions arise from the paper for future research?
- What important questions would it be nice if the paper answered, but does not answer?
- What does the paper present that is novel (no one else has provided that before)?
- What is the relevance of the paper to our satellite research goals?
- Questions from the group?
4. Completed readings include numerous prior items as well as these:
- 7/21/2023: We read https://planet4589.org/space/gcat/web/intro/type.html.
- 5/12/2023: We read https://planet4589.org/space/astro/web/astrolist.html and looked at https://planet4589.org/space/astro/lists/astro.html for examples. It appears that the date of the first flight for each astronaut is NOT given, even though the rows are in chronological order!
- 3/17/23: We read https://planet4589.org/space/astro/web/astrolist.html.
- We finished section 6 of MR paper (C:\Users\jdberleant\Dropbox\research\SpaceTravelMetric-b6-5-16\PapersAndPresentations\byOthers\MatthewRoughanDraft.pdf). This completes the parts that we planned to read.
- Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9o66fH_sgo (about MOXIE device which converts CO2 to oxygen). We then read a bit more about MOXIE on wikipedia.
- Https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2019/07/we-need-new-science-progress/594946 on "progress studies." Completed 9/30/22.
- Ryan et al., "A Forgotten Moment in Physiology: the Lovelace Woman in Space Program (1960-1962)", 2009. Completed 7/22/22.
- Various previous papers.
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