RutenGroup Profile Banner
Andrew Rutenberg Profile
Andrew Rutenberg

@RutenGroup

Followers
95
Following
12
Statuses
137

AC Fales Professor of Theoretical Physics @DalhousieU. Soft-matter and biological physics. Complex aging, collagen fibrils, single-file diffusion.

Halifax Nova Scotia Canada
Joined December 2020
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
2 years
@thekingschorus tickets for this Saturday at
0
0
0
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
2 years
Looking forward to our @thekingschorus concert this Saturday. “All the World's a Stage: A Concert of Popular Operatic and Stage Choruses” see
0
0
0
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
2 years
We just published a paper in Chaos on ”Network topologies for maximal organismal health span and lifespan”, see The upshot is that scale-free #networks (as previously assumed) are optimal. #aging #complexaging
1
0
2
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
2 years
Just published "Efficient representations of binarized health deficit data: the frailty index and beyond" in Geroscience: Glen Pridham used PCA on binarized deficit data and showed how the FI (and more) naturally emerges! #aging #geroscience #frailty
0
1
5
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
2 years
0
0
0
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
2 years
It felt good to study similar measures (#robustness and #resilience) in different organisms (#mice and #humans) during #aging It feels like we can learn the most from model organisms when we can do parallel studies with human data (or vice versa)
0
2
5
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
2 years
We’ve just published a nice paper in eLife on #robustness and #resilience during #aging, using binarized data from mice and humans. Both robustness and resilience decline with age, but the timescales of action vary broadly over different health attributes.
0
3
12
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
A real pleasure to be part of “A complex systems approach to aging biology” perspective led by Alan Cohen. More open longitudinal data will take veils away… #complexaging #quantitativeaging
0
0
2
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
In Canada it would be great to have this: “[CIHR] should explore the formation of [dedicated funding] devoted to biological physics”. [300 pages]
@p_r_francois
Paul Francois
3 years
Wow, this is fantastic. To be shared within all physics departments and beyond …
0
0
1
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
Glad to see the #alliance (formerly ComputeCanada) up and running on Earth (and Canada)!
0
0
0
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
Nice to see Newcastle recruiting at a senior level in #aginghealth. “This will require a multidisciplinary approach, drawing upon areas such as: •data science •artificial intelligence and machine learning •software engineering”
0
0
1
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
What #imputation is best for frailty imputation? MICE is good, but with CART rather than default.
0
0
2
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
So in #aging with studies of #frailty, you should use good imputation if you want calibrated (comparable) measures of FI between studies, or between populations, or between individuals — essentially if you want to (as precisely as you can) compare FI.
0
0
1
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
The idea is that while ignoring missing data still lets the FI (a summary measure of aging health) predict well, the ignored values are (with ignore) replaced with the individual average. This leads to a bias (or inaccuracy).
0
0
1
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
Congrats to Glen Pridham (PhD student) who just published a paper on the importance of imputation for precise FI (Frailty Index) studies
0
1
2
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
Spencer found that the interactions between health attributes are well-modelled as linear and time-independent. It will be interesting to see how far that generalizes to other types of data and organisms.
0
1
1
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
Joint models of #aging predict both health trajectories and mortality — both are needed to compare to large population studies. It is too easy to just get mortality (#Gompertz) right…
0
0
1
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
Glad to say our #ML #aging paper has just been published by PLOS Computational Biology We call it the DJIN model of aging (dynamic joint interpretable network model) Congratulations Spencer Farrell, who also just received a PhD from Dalhousie!
0
1
4
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
Congrats Ken Rockwood, for the Roman prize!
0
0
1
@RutenGroup
Andrew Rutenberg
3 years
Nice paper discussing how DAGs (directed acyclic graphs) push variance around, and how this can distort causal discovery benchmarks but may be exploitable IRL if variables have the same natural units. #APaperADay
1
3
6