Not exact matches
In the Nature Biotechnology study, the researchers used it to anchor proteins, and they also
showed that the technique works on tissue that has been previously
labeled with either
fluorescent antibodies or proteins such as green
fluorescent protein (GFP).
Green
fluorescent protein
labeling allowed them to see the early development pattern and
show that lncND, which ordinarily is not present in mice — lncND is present only in some primates including humans — had a functional effect on development.
«We trained the neural network by
showing it two sets of matching images of the same cells; one unlabeled and one with
fluorescent labels,» explained Christiansen, software engineer at Google Accelerated Science.
«We trained the neural network by
showing it two sets of matching images of the same cells; one unlabeled and one with
fluorescent labels,» coauthor Eric Christiansen, a software engineer at Google Accelerated Science, says a press release.