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1.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 15519, 2023 09 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37726292

ABSTRACT

Calcific uremic arteriolopathy (CUA) is a severely morbid disease, affecting mostly dialyzed end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients, associated with calcium deposits in the skin. Calcifications have been identified in ESRD patients without CUA, indicating that their presence is not specific to the disease. The objective of this retrospective multicenter study was to compare elastic fiber structure and skin calcifications in ESRD patients with CUA to those without CUA using innovative structural techniques. Fourteen ESRD patients with CUA were compared to 12 ESRD patients without CUA. Analyses of elastic fiber structure and skin calcifications using multiphoton microscopy followed by machine-learning analysis and field-emission scanning electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive X-ray were performed. Elastic fibers specifically appeared fragmented in CUA. Quantitative analyses of multiphoton images showed that they were significantly straighter in ESRD patients with CUA than without CUA. Interstitial and vascular calcifications were observed in both groups of ESRD patients, but vascular calcifications specifically appeared massive and circumferential in CUA. Unlike interstitial calcifications, massive circumferential vascular calcifications and elastic fibers straightening appeared specific to CUA. The origins of such specific elastic fiber's alteration are still to be explored and may involve relationships with ischemic vascular or inflammatory processes.


Subject(s)
Calciphylaxis , Kidney Failure, Chronic , Vascular Calcification , Humans , Elastic Tissue , Kidney Failure, Chronic/complications , Margins of Excision , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
2.
Light Sci Appl ; 12(1): 190, 2023 Aug 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37528091

ABSTRACT

A key property of the human cornea is to maintain its curvature and consequently its refraction capability despite daily changes in intraocular pressure. This is closely related to the multiscale structure of the corneal stroma, which consists of 1-3 µm-thick stacked lamellae made of thin collagen fibrils. Nevertheless, the distribution, size, and orientation of these lamellae along the depth of the cornea are poorly characterized up to now. In this study, we use second harmonic generation (SHG) microscopy to visualize the collagen distribution over the full depth of 10 intact and unstained human corneas (500-600 µm thick). We take advantage of the small coherence length in epi-detection to axially resolve the lamellae while maintaining the corneal physiological curvature. Moreover, as raw epi-detected SHG images are spatially homogenous because of the sub-wavelength size of stromal collagen fibrils, we use a polarimetric approach to measure the collagen orientation in every voxel. After a careful validation of this approach, we show that the collagen lamellae (i) are mostly oriented along the inferior-superior axis in the anterior stroma and along the nasal-temporal axis in the posterior stroma, with a gradual shift in between and (ii) exhibit more disorder in the anterior stroma. These results represent the first quantitative characterization of the lamellar structure of the human cornea continuously along its entire thickness with micrometric resolution. It also shows the unique potential of P-SHG microscopy for imaging of collagen distribution in thick dense tissues.

3.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 18(7): e1010211, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35789212

ABSTRACT

Tridimensional microscopy and algorithms for automated segmentation and tracing are revolutionizing neuroscience through the generation of growing libraries of neuron reconstructions. Innovative computational methods are needed to analyze these neuronal traces. In particular, means to characterize the geometric properties of traced neurites along their trajectory have been lacking. Here, we propose a local tridimensional (3D) scale metric derived from differential geometry, measuring for each point of a curve the characteristic length where it is fully 3D as opposed to being embedded in a 2D plane or 1D line. The larger this metric is and the more complex the local 3D loops and turns of the curve are. Available through the GeNePy3D open-source Python quantitative geometry library (https://genepy3d.gitlab.io), this approach termed nAdder offers new means of describing and comparing axonal and dendritic arbors. We validate this metric on simulated and real traces. By reanalysing a published zebrafish larva whole brain dataset, we show its ability to characterize different population of commissural axons, distinguish afferent connections to a target region and differentiate portions of axons and dendrites according to their behavior, shedding new light on the stereotypical nature of neurites' local geometry.


Subject(s)
Neurons , Zebrafish , Algorithms , Animals , Axons/physiology , Neurites , Neurons/physiology
4.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 22171, 2021 11 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34772978

ABSTRACT

Solar ultraviolet longwave UVA1 exposure of human skin has short-term consequences at cellular and molecular level, leading at long-term to photoaging. Following exposure, reactive oxygen species (ROS) are generated, inducing oxidative stress that might impair cellular metabolic activity. However, the dynamic of UVA1 impact on cellular metabolism remains unknown because of lacking adequate live imaging techniques. Here we assess the UVA1-induced metabolic stress response in reconstructed human skin with multicolor two-photon fluorescence lifetime microscopy (FLIM). Simultaneous imaging of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(P)H) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) by wavelength mixing allows quantifying cellular metabolism in function of NAD(P)+/NAD(P)H and FAD/FADH2 redox ratios. After UVA1 exposure, we observe an increase of fraction of bound NAD(P)H and decrease of fraction of bound FAD indicating a metabolic switch from glycolysis to oxidative phosphorylation or oxidative stress possibly correlated to ROS generation. NAD(P)H and FAD biomarkers have unique temporal dynamic and sensitivity to skin cell types and UVA1 dose. While the FAD biomarker is UVA1 dose-dependent in keratinocytes, the NAD(P)H biomarker shows no dose dependence in keratinocytes, but is directly affected after exposure in fibroblasts, thus reflecting different skin cells sensitivities to oxidative stress. Finally, we show that a sunscreen including a UVA1 filter prevents UVA1 metabolic stress response from occurring.


Subject(s)
Flavin-Adenine Dinucleotide/metabolism , NADP/metabolism , Skin/metabolism , Skin/radiation effects , Stress, Physiological/radiation effects , Ultraviolet Rays , Biomarkers , Deep Learning , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Optical Imaging , Sunlight
5.
Biomedicines ; 9(2)2021 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33672764

ABSTRACT

In skeletal muscle, long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are involved in dystrophin protein stabilization but also in the regulation of myocytes proliferation and differentiation. Hence, they could represent promising therapeutic targets and/or biomarkers for Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy (DMD/BMD). DMD and BMD are X-linked myopathies characterized by a progressive muscular dystrophy with or without dilatative cardiomyopathy. Two-thirds of DMD gene mutations are represented by deletions, and 63% of patients carrying DMD deletions are eligible for 45 to 55 multi-exons skipping (MES), becoming BMD patients (BMDΔ45-55). We analyzed the genomic lncRNA presence in 38 BMDΔ45-55 patients and characterized the lncRNA localized in introns 44 and 55 of the DMD gene. We highlighted that all four lncRNA are differentially expressed during myogenesis in immortalized and primary human myoblasts. In addition, the lncRNA44s2 was pointed out as a possible accelerator of differentiation. Interestingly, lncRNA44s expression was associated with a favorable clinical phenotype. These findings suggest that lncRNA44s2 could be involved in muscle differentiation process and become a potential disease progression biomarker. Based on these results, we support MES45-55 therapy and propose that the design of the CRISPR/Cas9 MES45-55 assay consider the lncRNA sequences bordering the exonic 45 to 55 deletion.

6.
F1000Res ; 9: 1374, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34249350

ABSTRACT

The advent of large-scale fluorescence and electronic microscopy techniques along with maturing image analysis is giving life sciences a deluge of geometrical objects in 2D/3D(+t) to deal with. These objects take the form of large scale, localised, precise, single cell, quantitative data such as cells' positions, shapes, trajectories or lineages, axon traces in whole brains atlases or varied intracellular protein localisations, often in multiple experimental conditions. The data mining of those geometrical objects requires a variety of mathematical and computational tools of diverse accessibility and complexity. Here we present a new Python library for quantitative 3D geometry called GeNePy3D which helps handle and mine information and knowledge from geometric data, providing a unified application programming interface (API) to methods from several domains including computational geometry, scale space methods or spatial statistics. By framing this library as generically as possible, and by linking it to as many state-of-the-art reference algorithms and projects as needed, we help render those often specialist methods accessible to a larger community. We exemplify the usefulness of the  GeNePy3D toolbox by re-analysing a recently published whole-brain zebrafish neuronal atlas, with other applications and examples available online. Along with an open source, documented and exemplified code, we release reusable containers to allow for convenient and wide usability and increased reproducibility.


Subject(s)
Software , Zebrafish , Algorithms , Animals , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Reproducibility of Results , Zebrafish/genetics
7.
Essays Biochem ; 63(2): 197-208, 2019 07 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31243141

ABSTRACT

In the past 15 years, cell-based microscopy has evolved its focus from observing cell function to aiming to predict it. In particular-powered by breakthroughs in computer vision, large-scale image analysis and machine learning-high-throughput and high-content microscopy imaging have enabled to uniquely harness single-cell information to systematically discover and annotate genes and regulatory pathways, uncover systems-level interactions and causal links between cellular processes, and begin to clarify and predict causal cellular behaviour and decision making. Here we review these developments, discuss emerging trends in the field, and describe how single-cell 'omics and single-cell microscopy are imminently in an intersecting trajectory. The marriage of these two fields will make possible an unprecedented understanding of cell and tissue behaviour and function.


Subject(s)
Cells/ultrastructure , High-Throughput Screening Assays/methods , Single-Cell Analysis/methods , Machine Learning , Microscopy
8.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 2160, 2019 May 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31073140

ABSTRACT

Affiliation 4 incorrectly read 'University of the Basque Country (Ikerbasque), University of the Basque Country and Donostia International Physics Center, San Sebastian 20018, Spain.'Also, the affiliations of Ignacio Arganda-Carreras with 'IKERBASQUE, Basque Foundation for Science, Bilbao, 48013, Spain' and 'Donostia International Physics Center (DIPC), San Sebastian, 20018, Spain' were inadvertently omitted.Additionally, the third sentence of the first paragraph of the Results section entitled 'Multicontrast organ-scale imaging with ChroMS microscopy' incorrectly read 'For example, one can choose lambda1 = 850 and lambda2 = 110 nm for optimal two-photon excitation of blue and red chromophores.'. The correct version reads 'lambda2 = 1100 nm' instead of 'lambda2 = 110 nm'. These errors have now been corrected in the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.

9.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 1662, 2019 04 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30971684

ABSTRACT

Large-scale microscopy approaches are transforming brain imaging, but currently lack efficient multicolor contrast modalities. We introduce chromatic multiphoton serial (ChroMS) microscopy, a method integrating one-shot multicolor multiphoton excitation through wavelength mixing and serial block-face image acquisition. This approach provides organ-scale micrometric imaging of spectrally distinct fluorescent proteins and label-free nonlinear signals with constant micrometer-scale resolution and sub-micron channel registration over the entire imaged volume. We demonstrate tridimensional (3D) multicolor imaging over several cubic millimeters as well as brain-wide serial 2D multichannel imaging. We illustrate the strengths of this method through color-based 3D analysis of astrocyte morphology and contacts in the mouse cerebral cortex, tracing of individual pyramidal neurons within densely Brainbow-labeled tissue, and multiplexed whole-brain mapping of axonal projections labeled with spectrally distinct tracers. ChroMS will be an asset for multiscale and system-level studies in neuroscience and beyond.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Luminescent Proteins/chemistry , Microscopy, Fluorescence, Multiphoton/methods , Neuroimaging/methods , Animals , Astrocytes/metabolism , Cerebral Cortex/cytology , Color , Dependovirus , Female , Genetic Vectors/administration & dosage , Genetic Vectors/genetics , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Luminescent Proteins/genetics , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Transgenic , Models, Animal , Nestin/genetics , Neuroanatomical Tract-Tracing Techniques/methods , Parvovirinae/genetics , Pyramidal Cells/metabolism , Transfection
10.
Nat Methods ; 15(11): 984, 2018 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30287931

ABSTRACT

This paper was originally published under standard Nature America Inc. copyright. As of the date of this correction, the Resource is available online as an open-access paper with a CC-BY license. No other part of the paper has been changed.

11.
Nat Methods ; 14(8): 775-781, 2017 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28775673

ABSTRACT

Access to primary research data is vital for the advancement of science. To extend the data types supported by community repositories, we built a prototype Image Data Resource (IDR) that collects and integrates imaging data acquired across many different imaging modalities. IDR links data from several imaging modalities, including high-content screening, super-resolution and time-lapse microscopy, digital pathology, public genetic or chemical databases, and cell and tissue phenotypes expressed using controlled ontologies. Using this integration, IDR facilitates the analysis of gene networks and reveals functional interactions that are inaccessible to individual studies. To enable re-analysis, we also established a computational resource based on Jupyter notebooks that allows remote access to the entire IDR. IDR is also an open source platform that others can use to publish their own image data. Thus IDR provides both a novel on-line resource and a software infrastructure that promotes and extends publication and re-analysis of scientific image data.


Subject(s)
Database Management Systems , Databases, Factual , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Information Dissemination/methods , Software , User-Computer Interface , Algorithms , Publishing , Systems Integration
12.
Methods ; 115: 110-118, 2017 02 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28057585

ABSTRACT

This review aims at providing a practical overview of the use of statistical features and associated data science methods in bioimage informatics. To achieve a quantitative link between images and biological concepts, one typically replaces an object coming from an image (a segmented cell or intracellular object, a pattern of expression or localisation, even a whole image) by a vector of numbers. They range from carefully crafted biologically relevant measurements to features learnt through deep neural networks. This replacement allows for the use of practical algorithms for visualisation, comparison and inference, such as the ones from machine learning or multivariate statistics. While originating mainly, for biology, in high content screening, those methods are integral to the use of data science for the quantitative analysis of microscopy images to gain biological insight, and they are sure to gather more interest as the need to make sense of the increasing amount of acquired imaging data grows more pressing.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/statistics & numerical data , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/statistics & numerical data , Machine Learning , Microscopy, Fluorescence/statistics & numerical data , Pattern Recognition, Automated/statistics & numerical data , Analysis of Variance , Computational Biology/methods , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Information Dissemination/methods , Information Storage and Retrieval/methods
13.
Nat Commun ; 7: 11373, 2016 04 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27109213

ABSTRACT

Cell competition is a quality control mechanism that eliminates unfit cells. How cells compete is poorly understood, but it is generally accepted that molecular exchange between cells signals elimination of unfit cells. Here we report an orthogonal mechanism of cell competition, whereby cells compete through mechanical insults. We show that MDCK cells silenced for the polarity gene scribble (scrib(KD)) are hypersensitive to compaction, that interaction with wild-type cells causes their compaction and that crowding is sufficient for scrib(KD) cell elimination. Importantly, we show that elevation of the tumour suppressor p53 is necessary and sufficient for crowding hypersensitivity. Compaction, via activation of Rho-associated kinase (ROCK) and the stress kinase p38, leads to further p53 elevation, causing cell death. Thus, in addition to molecules, cells use mechanical means to compete. Given the involvement of p53, compaction hypersensitivity may be widespread among damaged cells and offers an additional route to eliminate unfit cells.


Subject(s)
Cell Communication , Madin Darby Canine Kidney Cells/chemistry , Madin Darby Canine Kidney Cells/cytology , Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/metabolism , Animals , Apoptosis , Biomechanical Phenomena , Dogs , Drosophila/cytology , Drosophila/genetics , Drosophila/metabolism , Drosophila Proteins/genetics , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Madin Darby Canine Kidney Cells/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/genetics , rho-Associated Kinases/genetics , rho-Associated Kinases/metabolism
14.
Genome Biol ; 16: 283, 2015 Dec 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26679168

ABSTRACT

High-throughput/high-content microscopy-based screens are powerful tools for functional genomics, yielding intracellular information down to the level of single-cells for thousands of genotypic conditions. However, accessing their data requires specialized knowledge and most often that data is no longer analyzed after initial publication. We describe Mineotaur ( http://www.mineotaur.org ), a open-source, downloadable web application that allows easy online sharing and interactive visualisation of large screen datasets, facilitating their dissemination and further analysis, and enhancing their impact.


Subject(s)
Information Dissemination/methods , Software , Datasets as Topic , Microscopy/methods
15.
Nat Commun ; 6: 8400, 2015 Oct 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26455310

ABSTRACT

The amazing structural variety of cells is matched only by their functional diversity, and reflects the complex interplay between biochemical and mechanical regulation. How both regulatory layers generate specifically shaped cellular domains is not fully understood. Here, we report how cell growth domains are shaped in fission yeast. Based on quantitative analysis of cell wall expansion and elasticity, we develop a model for how mechanics and cell wall assembly interact and use it to look for factors underpinning growth domain morphogenesis. Surprisingly, we find that neither the global cell shape regulators Cdc42-Scd1-Scd2 nor the major cell wall synthesis regulators Bgs1-Bgs4-Rgf1 are reliable predictors of growth domain geometry. Instead, their geometry can be defined by cell wall mechanics and the cortical localization pattern of the exocytic factors Sec6-Syb1-Exo70. Forceful re-directioning of exocytic vesicle fusion to broader cortical areas induces proportional shape changes to growth domains, demonstrating that both features are causally linked.


Subject(s)
Exocytosis , Models, Biological , Schizosaccharomyces/growth & development , Biomechanical Phenomena , Cell Cycle , Cell Wall/metabolism , Schizosaccharomyces/metabolism , cdc42 GTP-Binding Protein/metabolism
16.
Nat Genet ; 47(3): 235-41, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25665008

ABSTRACT

Natural variation within species reveals aspects of genome evolution and function. The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe is an important model for eukaryotic biology, but researchers typically use one standard laboratory strain. To extend the usefulness of this model, we surveyed the genomic and phenotypic variation in 161 natural isolates. We sequenced the genomes of all strains, finding moderate genetic diversity (π = 3 × 10(-3) substitutions/site) and weak global population structure. We estimate that dispersal of S. pombe began during human antiquity (∼340 BCE), and ancestors of these strains reached the Americas at ∼1623 CE. We quantified 74 traits, finding substantial heritable phenotypic diversity. We conducted 223 genome-wide association studies, with 89 traits showing at least one association. The most significant variant for each trait explained 22% of the phenotypic variance on average, with indels having larger effects than SNPs. This analysis represents a rich resource to examine genotype-phenotype relationships in a tractable model.


Subject(s)
Genome, Fungal , Schizosaccharomyces/genetics , Genetic Variation , Genome-Wide Association Study/methods , Genomics/methods , Genotype , Humans , Phenotype , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
17.
IEEE Trans Image Process ; 24(2): 667-80, 2015 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25531952

ABSTRACT

Image analysis applied to fluorescence live cell microscopy has become a key tool in molecular biology since it enables to characterize biological processes in space and time at the subcellular level. In fluorescence microscopy imaging, the moving tagged structures of interest, such as vesicles, appear as bright spots over a static or nonstatic background. In this paper, we consider the problem of vesicle segmentation and time-varying background estimation at the cellular scale. The main idea is to formulate the joint segmentation-estimation problem in the general conditional random field framework. Furthermore, segmentation of vesicles and background estimation are alternatively performed by energy minimization using a min cut-max flow algorithm. The proposed approach relies on a detection measure computed from intensity contrasts between neighboring blocks in fluorescence microscopy images. This approach permits analysis of either 2D + time or 3D + time data. We demonstrate the performance of the so-called C-CRAFT through an experimental comparison with the state-of-the-art methods in fluorescence video-microscopy. We also use this method to characterize the spatial and temporal distribution of Rab6 transport carriers at the cell periphery for two different specific adhesion geometries.


Subject(s)
Cytological Techniques/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Algorithms , Green Fluorescent Proteins , HeLa Cells , Humans , Luminescent Agents , Microscopy, Video , rab GTP-Binding Proteins
18.
Dev Cell ; 31(2): 227-239, 2014 Oct 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25373780

ABSTRACT

Understanding cells as integrated systems requires that we systematically decipher how single genes affect multiple biological processes and how processes are functionally linked. Here, we used multiprocess phenotypic profiling, combining high-resolution 3D confocal microscopy and multiparametric image analysis, to simultaneously survey the fission yeast genome with respect to three key cellular processes: cell shape, microtubule organization, and cell-cycle progression. We identify, validate, and functionally annotate 262 genes controlling specific aspects of those processes. Of these, 62% had not been linked to these processes before and 35% are implicated in multiple processes. Importantly, we identify a conserved role for DNA-damage responses in controlling microtubule stability. In addition, we investigate how the processes are functionally linked. We show unexpectedly that disruption of cell-cycle progression does not necessarily affect cell size control and that distinct aspects of cell shape regulate microtubules and vice versa, identifying important systems-level links across these processes.


Subject(s)
Cell Cycle/genetics , Cell Shape/genetics , Microtubules/genetics , Schizosaccharomyces pombe Proteins/genetics , Cell Cycle Proteins/genetics , Cell Division , DNA Damage , DNA Repair , Fungal Proteins/genetics , Gene Knockout Techniques , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Microscopy, Confocal , Microtubules/physiology , Protein Transport/genetics , Schizosaccharomyces/cytology , Schizosaccharomyces/genetics , Transcription, Genetic/genetics
19.
PLoS One ; 9(9): e106959, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25210736

ABSTRACT

Every cell has a characteristic shape key to its fate and function. That shape is not only the product of genetic design and of the physical and biochemical environment, but it is also subject to inheritance. However, the nature and contribution of cell shape inheritance to morphogenetic control is mostly ignored. Here, we investigate morphogenetic inheritance in the cylindrically-shaped fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Focusing on sixteen different 'curved' mutants--a class of mutants which often fail to grow axially straight--we quantitatively characterize their dynamics of cell shape inheritance throughout generations. We show that mutants of similar machineries display similar dynamics of cell shape inheritance, and exploit this feature to show that persistent axial cell growth in S. pombe is secured by multiple, separable molecular pathways. Finally, we find that one of those pathways corresponds to the swc2-swr1-vps71 SWR1/SRCAP chromatin remodelling complex, which acts additively to the known mal3-tip1-mto1-mto2 microtubule and tea1-tea2-tea4-pom1 polarity machineries.


Subject(s)
Cell Shape/genetics , Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly/genetics , Schizosaccharomyces/growth & development , Cell Polarity/genetics , Cell Polarity/physiology , Cell Shape/physiology , Metabolic Networks and Pathways/genetics , Microtubules/genetics , Mutation , Protein Transport/physiology , Schizosaccharomyces/genetics
20.
Elife ; 3: e02273, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24497549

ABSTRACT

Delegates at scientific meetings can come from diverse backgrounds and use very different methods in their research. Promoting interactions between these 'distant' delegates is challenging but such interactions could lead to novel interdisciplinary collaborations and unexpected breakthroughs. We have developed a network-based 'speed dating' approach that allows us to initiate such distant interactions by pairing every delegate with another delegate who might be of interest to them, but whom they might never have encountered otherwise. Here we describe our approach and its algorithmic implementation.


Subject(s)
Congresses as Topic , Science , Workforce
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