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Results for "Evolutionary Biology"

From Neanderthal to Google

KAUST ·

Janet Kelso from the Max Planck Institute and Sudhir Kumar from Temple University discussed evolutionary biology in a KAUST Facebook Live interview. Kelso's research focuses on interactions between modern humans and Neanderthals, finding similarities in DNA and benefits for environmental adaptation. Kumar's work, highly cited, involves big data analyses in evolutionary biology. Why it matters: The interview highlights KAUST's engagement with international experts in bioinformatics and evolutionary biology, promoting interdisciplinary research and knowledge dissemination.

A vision in color

KAUST ·

Shozo Yokoyama, a biology professor at Emory University specializing in color vision evolution, was interviewed by KAUST. Yokoyama's lab identified amino acids regulating red-green and UV vision in vertebrates. He emphasizes the importance of young scientists developing fresh perspectives on evolution and learning directly from animals. Why it matters: While not directly an AI story, the piece highlights KAUST's broader research focus and its investment in attracting and showcasing international scientific expertise, relevant to building a strong research ecosystem.

Examining how technology informs science

KAUST ·

KAUST's Computational Bioscience Research Center (CBRC) held a Research Conference on Big Data Analyses in Evolutionary Biology. The conference focused on the impact of large "omics" datasets on evolutionary biology, requiring big data approaches for analysis. Researchers discussed how computer science can contribute to biology and vice versa. Why it matters: Such interdisciplinary events at KAUST can foster innovation at the intersection of computational science and biology, advancing research in both fields.

WEP 2014: Dr. Michael Purugganan - The Origins of Crop Species

KAUST ·

NYU Professor Michael Purugganan presented at KAUST's 2014 Winter Enrichment Program (WEP 2014) on the origins of crop species. He discussed how genome sequencing is improving our understanding of crop evolution, using date fruits collected in Jeddah as an example. His research on rice showed that two varieties, japonica and indica, share a single common ancestor, contrary to previous assumptions. Why it matters: Understanding crop evolution can help adapt crops to changing environments, which is crucial for food security in regions like the Middle East.

Dr. Takashi Gojobori receives honorary degree

KAUST ·

Dr. Takashi Gojobori, a KAUST professor and expert in molecular evolution, received an honorary doctoral degree from National Cheng Kung University (NCKU) in Taiwan. The degree recognizes Gojobori's contributions to evolutionary genomics and molecular evolution. A KAUST delegation led by VP James A. Calvin attended the conferring ceremony. Why it matters: The recognition highlights KAUST's faculty quality and contributions to international research collaborations.

EvoLMM: Self-Evolving Large Multimodal Models with Continuous Rewards

arXiv ·

Researchers at MBZUAI have introduced EvoLMM, a self-evolving framework for large multimodal models that enhances reasoning capabilities without human-annotated data or reward distillation. EvoLMM uses two cooperative agents, a Proposer and a Solver, which generate image-grounded questions and solve them through internal consistency, using a continuous self-rewarding process. Evaluations using Qwen2.5-VL as the base model showed performance gains of up to 3% on multimodal math-reasoning benchmarks like ChartQA, MathVista, and MathVision using only raw training images.

Unveiling new insights through ancient DNA

KAUST ·

Hanin Ahmed, a KAUST Ph.D. graduate in plant science, is now an Ibn-Rushd Postdoctoral Fellow at The Centre for Anthropology and Genomics of Toulouse, France. Her Ph.D. research at KAUST focused on the population genomics and evolutionary history of fonio millet and einkorn wheat. One key finding was the influence of ethnic groups on the genetic diversity of fonio millet, and insights into wheat adaptation during early agriculture from einkorn wheat research published in Nature. Why it matters: This highlights KAUST's role in training researchers who are contributing to advancements in genomics and agriculture, with implications for crop improvement and understanding the impact of social factors on plant genetics.