Sepideh Parhami (@sepidehparhami) 's Twitter Profile
Sepideh Parhami

@sepidehparhami

MS Computer Science (UCLA 2021). Interested in the intersection of data science and human health. Litter box trained and plays well with others.

ID: 963589788585443329

linkhttp://linkedin.com/in/sepideh-parhami calendar_today14-02-2018 01:44:43

117 Tweet

122 Followers

885 Following

Mikael Thalen (@mikaelthalen) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This shows the location data of phones that were on a Florida beach during Spring Break. It then shows where those phones traveled. First thing you should note is the importance of social distancing. The second is how much data your phone gives off.

Sepideh Parhami (@sepidehparhami) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Amazing work from Dr.(!) de Bree et al. detailing surprising regional differences in ASD cortex. Lovely to see my lil data preprocessing applied to something so meaningful

Eric Topol (@erictopol) 's Twitter Profile Photo

There's been controversy as to whether #SARSCoV2 directly attacks brain cells. This new Journal of Experimental Medicine paper supports that it occurs via brain organoids, mouse models, and patient autopsy. And lack of IFN response. rupress.org/jem/article/21… eric hoyeon song Prof. Akiko Iwasaki Yale School of Medicine Yale Department of Immunobiology

There's been controversy as to whether #SARSCoV2 directly attacks brain cells. This new <a href="/JExpMed/">Journal of Experimental Medicine</a> paper supports that it occurs via brain organoids, mouse models, and patient autopsy. And lack of IFN response.
rupress.org/jem/article/21… <a href="/ericsongg/">eric hoyeon song</a> <a href="/VirusesImmunity/">Prof. Akiko Iwasaki</a> <a href="/YaleMed/">Yale School of Medicine</a> <a href="/YaleIBIO/">Yale Department of Immunobiology</a>
Kathy Griffin (@kathygriffin) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Hey guys! For those of you who keep asking what my schedule is... I will work from early in the morning until late in the evening. I will make many calls and have many meetings.

Ethan Mollick (@emollick) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Tilt your scatterplots? We tend to interpret scatterplots as meaning whatever is on the x-axis causing whatever is on the y-axis, even if no causation is implied. This paper makes the argument that we should move to diamond plots instead, altering the graph & breaking the bias.

Tilt your scatterplots?

We tend to interpret scatterplots as meaning whatever is on the x-axis causing whatever is on the y-axis, even if no causation is implied. This paper makes the argument that we should move to diamond plots instead, altering the graph &amp; breaking the bias.