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Nils Gehlenborg
274 posts
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Nils Gehlenborg
@ngehlenborg
Faculty @harvarddbmi. Data Visualization. Biomedical Informatics. Genomics. Epigenomics. Cancer Biology. Single-Cell X. EHR UI. mHealth Data.
Boston, MA
github.com/ngehlenborg
Joined May 2016
237
Following
212
Followers
  • Pinned
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    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    Apr 21, 2025
    Science doesn’t suffer from a lack of data. It suffers from a lack of shared understanding. The bottleneck isn’t computation. It’s communication.
    2K
  • user avatar
    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    May 21, 2025
    The most important work feels boring to watch. It’s hard, slow, and rarely optimized for social media. But it’s the only work that lasts.
    845
  • user avatar
    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    May 13, 2025
    Most infrastructure isn’t flashy. It’s silent, robust, and thankless until something breaks. That’s when you realize who built carefully, and who just built.
    677
  • user avatar
    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    May 2, 2025
    We’re not short on data. We’re short on systems that make complexity understandable. The next frontier isn’t scale. It’s clarity.
    412
  • user avatar
    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    Apr 29, 2025
    Biology is messy, chaotic, unpredictable. AI brings structure, prediction, and possibility. The intersection between the two is where the next generation of medicine will be born.
    392
  • user avatar
    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    Jun 3, 2025
    We’re entering an era where AI isn’t just reacting to data. It’s starting to navigate systems. From biology to markets it’s not a chatbot revolution. It’s a systems revolution.
    178
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    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    Apr 24, 2025
    The most dangerous assumption in science is that data alone is enough. What we see defines what we understand.
    228
  • user avatar
    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    Apr 25, 2025
    The beauty of biology is in its messiness. The beauty of informatics is in helping us see patterns within that chaos —without flattening its complexity.
    245
  • user avatar
    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    Apr 28, 2025
    95% of meaningful progress happens behind closed doors, long before it becomes visible to the world. The ones who stay consistent without applause end up defining the future.
    310
  • user avatar
    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    Apr 26, 2025
    Agreed.
    user avatar
    Derya Unutmaz, MD
    @DeryaTR_
    Apr 25, 2025
    This is a terrible situation! AI is the most transformative technology in human history, yet we are denying the best of the best the chance to work here. America-the land of the free & of immigrants-cannot maintain its competitive advantage if it keeps hurting itself with this
    329
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    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    Apr 22, 2025
    It’s true that acceleration is undeniable. But I worry that while the tech jumps decades, our ability to interpret and interface with it still crawls. If we don't fix how humans interact with complexity, the future risks outrunning our understanding.
    user avatar
    Derya Unutmaz, MD
    @DeryaTR_
    Apr 20, 2025
    We will see a century’s worth of advance in the next 10 years. AI, robotics, and domain advances in biotech, energy will compress decades into quarters. The next 10 years will feel less like “the 2030s” and more like flipping straight from 1925 to 2025 in one giant page‑turn.
    197
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    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    Apr 23, 2025
    One particularly exciting direction for CellFlow is its potential integration with epigenomic data layers such as ATAC-seq, DNA methylation, or histone modification profiles. Since flow matching captures smooth, learnable trajectories of perturbation-induced cellular change, it
    user avatar
    Fabian Theis
    @fabian_theis
    Apr 22, 2025
    1/ Excited to share CellFlow, a new approach for complex perturbation modeling in single-cell genomics based on flow matching. From cytokine screens to cell fate and organoid engineering, we show CellFlow’s broad power across many diverse tasks. 👉 Paper: biorxiv.org/content/10.110…
    Image
    250
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    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    Apr 23, 2025
    The human brain didn’t evolve to understand 40,000 gene expression vectors. It evolved to recognize form, shape, and signal.
    175
  • user avatar
    Nils Gehlenborg
    @ngehlenborg
    Apr 25, 2025
    We teach machines to read petabytes. But we still haven’t figured out how to help humans read a figure.
    237

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