Proteins play countless roles throughout the biological world, from catalyzing chemical reactions to building the structures of all living things. Despite this wide range of functions all proteins are made out of the same twenty amino acids, but combined in different ways. The way these twenty amino acids are arranged dictates the folding of the protein into its primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structure. Since protein function is based on the ability to recognize and bind to specific molecules, having the correct shape is critical for proteins to do their jobs correctly. Learn more about the relationship between protein structure and function in this video.
A collection of .BLEND and .FBX files to accompany the Robotic Design with Blender tutorial series on YouTube:(Part 1) https://youtu.be/aRBHMRa6pIA(Part 2) https://youtu.be/TKc-g84j2x8(Part 3) https://youtu.be/Cuo_ytkvCpo(Part
Hi Guys, I have Always been asked to share my code which I use in my video. Answering people’s questions is great, and the feeling you get when you solve a p...
One of the hardest concepts to grasp when learning about Convolutional Neural Networks for object detection is the idea of anchor boxes. It is also one of the most important parameters you can tune…
Path tracing is a method for generating digital images by simulating how light would interact with objects in a virtual world. The path of light is traced by...
ReSanskrit explores every aspect of Aditya Hrudayam Stotram - right from the story, rules of recitation, benefits and scientific significant. Click to read now
A. Cimatti, F. Fraternali, and C. Nipoti. (2019)cite arxiv:1912.06216Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, first introductory chapter of the textbook published by Cambridge University Press. For more information https://decdb4ae-c884-4971-9114-5f11b6929fd9.filesusr.com/ugd/f44359_26d2207ea96e4f359636feb5b7473336.pdf.
G. Bauch, and G. Dietl. (October 2008)Tutorial at the 4th Annual IEEE International Conference on Wireless and Mobile Computing, Networking, and Communications, WiMob 2008, Avignon, France.
G. Bauch, and G. Dietl. (December 2007)Tutorial at the 10th International Symposium on Wireless Personal Multimedia Communications, WPMC 2007, Jaipur, India, December 2007.
A. Slivkins. (2019)cite arxiv:1904.07272Comment: The manuscript is complete, but comments are very welcome! To be published with Foundations and Trends in Machine Learning.
R. Sharipov. (2004)cite arxiv:math/0412421Comment: The textbook, AmSTeX, 132 pages, amsppt style, prepared for double side printing on letter size paper.
R. Sharipov. (2004)cite arxiv:math/0405323Comment: The textbook, AmSTeX, 143 pages, amsppt style, prepared for double side printing on letter size paper.
M. Caspersen, and J. Bennedsen. Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Computing Education Research, page 111--122. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2007)
U. Menne. (2017)cite arxiv:1705.05253Comment: The present text is a version with additional references but without figures of a note compiled for the Notices of the American Mathematical Society. (v4: considerably expanded introduction, 6 pages).
M. Caspersen, and J. Bennedsen. Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Computing Education Research, page 111--122. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2007)
C. Lange, M. Kerber, and C. Rowat. (2013)Tutorial at INFORMATIK 2013, Computer science adapted to humans, organization and the environment, 43rd annual meeting of the German Informatics Society (Gesellschaft für Informatik e.V. (GI)).
A. Saibaba. (2015)cite arxiv:1511.05208v2.pdfComment: 28 pages, 9 figures, minor revisions. Lemma 3.2 has been removed and result of Theorem 3.3 (new version) is significantly better.