Hernán Aguirre
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ahernan.bsky.social
Hernán Aguirre
@ahernan.bsky.social

Ecuadorian scientist. Professor at Shinshu University, Japan. Co-director LIA-MODO. Works on computational intelligence, evolutionary computation and sustainability.

Computer science 76%
Engineering 16%

Certainly the USA investment in science is significant. However, it seems there is something wrong with the chart. Germany and France spendings are far greater than the chart shows.

Nothing to worry about. Spock would agree with “data”, in singular. 🤓

Reposted by Hernán Aguirre

Stay or go?

A Safe Place for Science 🧪

Aix-Marseille University offers a program for scientists "threatened in their research" in America.

An opportunity to attract talent as Trump cuts funding.

French program for US scientists draws flood of applicants
amp.dw.com/en/french-pr...

Reposted by Hernán Aguirre

OTD in 1953, J Watson and F Crick published a paper describing the double helical structure of DNA in the journal Nature.

M Wilkins and co-authors, and R Franklin and R Gosling, published separate papers in the same issue with X-ray crystallography analysis.

🧪🌱🐋 #HistSTM #EvoBi

Ale, allí eligieron, literalmente, a Adolfo. 😜

Reposted by Hernán Aguirre

Especially because the USA is not safe for foreigners, they could end up in El Salvador.
Enough internet. Time to cheer myself up by writing about how dark energy will eventually destroy the universe.

Give him hell 😜
Video of the international student at Tufts being arrested by "federal authorities" in Massachusetts has been released and it's terrifying.

They're not even uniformed officers. Just secret police thugs in hoodies and masks.

From WCVB: youtu.be/PuFIs7OkzYY

Reposted by Hernán Aguirre

Join me for a Skeptical Inquirer Presents live stream event on Thursday, April 3 at 7:00pm (EST) for a discussion on “Science Under Siege”:

skepticalinquirer.org/video/scienc...

Reposted by Hernán Aguirre

Reposted by Hernán Aguirre

Whenever I post about climate, skeptical folks inevitable respond with this graph. So I decided to do something radical: actually read the underling scientific paper and ask the authors.

As it turns out, it actually says the opposite of what skeptics claim: www.theclimatebrink....

Reposted by Hernán Aguirre

Another global sea level update with satellite altimetry data now processed by CNES/AVISO through late January 2025. It's accelerating. 🌊

+ Note that this graph was produced by www.aviso.altimetry.fr/en/data/prod...

Reposted by Hernán Aguirre

In fact it’s from: Aspects of human physical and behavioural evolution during the last 1 million years
Galway-Witham, Cole & Stringer 2019
doi.org/10.1002/jqs....

Reposted by Hernán Aguirre

Reposted by Hernán Aguirre

15 Years Later, the National Museum of Natural History Is Still Asking What It Means to Be Human www.smithsonianmag.com/blogs/nation...
15 Years Later, the National Museum of Natural History Is Still Asking What It Means to Be Human
The museum’s groundbreaking Hall of Human Origins centers around the adaptations that set early humans apart
www.smithsonianmag.com

Thanks!

Trying to get the paper.

Reposted by Hernán Aguirre

#ClimateChange is melting Antarctica, but at what rate? Stanford scholars used #AI and machine learning to reveal that current models predicting the ice sheet's shrinkage and movement are missing key data.
Find out what's needed @stanforddoerr.bsky.social: stanford.io/4bD2NJ2
AI reveals new insights into the flow of Antarctic ice
Stanford researchers have combined machine learning with high-resolution satellite and airplane observations to understand the physics behind large-scale ice movements in Antarctica. The results show ...
stanford.io
I humbly offer for your consideration the foundational, and therefore most important, paper in the history of my scientific field. I specifically wish to draw your attention to the fact that

it is FOUR PARAGRAPHS long

FOUR as in 4

🧵 #ScienceSky 1/n

World Congress on Computational Intelligence, 2024, Yokohama. During the banquet Prof. Hisao Ishibuchi dresses as a samurai. In the background the kanjis for keisan chinou, computational intelligence. We had a good time.

Tagawa san presenting our work at WCCI 2024, Yokohama, Japan.

Takei kun presenting our work at WCCI 2024, Yokohama, Japan.

Rui presenting our work at WCCI 2024.

China Town, Yokohama. World Congress on Computational Intelligence 2024.