Anand Ganesan

966 posts

Anand Ganesan banner
Anand Ganesan

Anand Ganesan

@Vortex_mapper

Director of Cardiac Electrophysiology,Flinders Medical Centre | Head, Cardiac Signals Analysis Lab| Professor of Medicine, Flinders University, Australia

Adelaide Katılım Haziran 2014
2.1K Takip Edilen1.8K Takipçiler
Anand Ganesan retweetledi
Jenelle Dziano
Jenelle Dziano@JenelleDziano·
@JonathanAriya highlighting the importance of maintaining sinus rhythm while on the ablation wait list. ⚠️ Progression of PersAF during this wait time associated with worse outcomes at 12 months. #CHRD #HRS2025 @UniofAdelaide
Jenelle Dziano tweet media
English
0
3
13
593
Anand Ganesan retweetledi
Anand Ganesan retweetledi
Sobhan Salari Shahrbabaki
Sobhan Salari Shahrbabaki@sobhan_salari·
Our new paper published in Journal of Sleep Research: we explored how sleep architecture & disturbances contribute to nocturnal arrhythmia (NAA) avalanches using a GLM framework & 7,341 PSG- derived ECG recordings from MESA & SHHS #sleepscience #arrhythmia #glm @ESRS_Sleep
Anand Ganesan@Vortex_mapper

New paper from our team on the dynamics of nocturnal arrhythmia avalanches during sleep 🛌💤 @sobhan_salari onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/js…

English
0
2
3
272
Anand Ganesan retweetledi
Jason Andrade
Jason Andrade@DrJasonAndrade·
Amazing news and well-deserved honour. Congratulations @StanleyNattel
CJC Journals@CJCJournals

🏅 Dr. Stanley Nattel, Editor-in-Chief of the Canadian Journal of Cardiology (#CJC), has been appointed to the Order of Canada today by the Governor General in recognition of his significant contributions to Canadian cardiovascular research. A heartfelt congratulations to @StanleyNattel for this remarkable honour! 🇨🇦 From the website of the Governor General of Canada: Dr. Nattel is a globally recognized expert in the mechanisms and management of atrial fibrillation, the most common arrhythmia and a leading cause of stroke. Through his groundbreaking work, he has greatly advanced our understanding and treatment of this condition. As Editor-in-Chief of CJC, Dr. Nattel has broadened the impact of Canadian cardiovascular research and supported the next generation of researchers. Read the full announcement here ⬇️ gg.ca/en/media/news/…

English
4
15
33
4.4K
Anand Ganesan retweetledi
Anil Ananthaswamy
Anil Ananthaswamy@anilananth·
One small thing Geoff Hinton and David Rumelhart did -- apropos of his physics #NobelPrize2024 -- that often goes unnoticed when we talk of his neural network work is the idea of symmetry breaking. Granted it's not quite the same as how physicists think of it, but it's worth recounting. In 1958, Frank Rosenblatt devised the perceptron, which could be used to construct single-layer neural networks. Rosenblatt realized that if the weights of each perceptron started off identically, they'd all learn the same thing! In other words, they were redundant. There was a symmetry that needed to be broken if the perceptrons were to learn different features in the data. Rosenblatt wrote that there should be some stochasticity in the network to break symmetry. He didn't specify exactly what he meant. Hinton for a long time thought that the stochasticity should be in the output of the artificial neurons. This was the wrong approach. "This slowed me down for a while," he told me (quoted in WHY MACHINES LEARN). Hinton began working with David Rumelhart. Almost immediately, Rumelhart proposed a solution. “His immediate reaction was ‘Well, why can’t we just break symmetry by having random initial weights?’ Rosenblatt didn’t think of that,” Hinton told me. (quoted in WML). The rest, as they say, is history. Rumelhart, Hinton and Williams wrote the 1986 Nature paper on backpropagation that specifically addressed the issue of features learned by neural networks when trained with backprop. The revolution was set in motion. All this and more is narrated in WHY MACHINES LEARN. US: penguinrandomhouse.com/books/677608/w… UK: penguin.co.uk/books/446849/w…
Anil Ananthaswamy tweet media
English
0
22
90
4.6K
Anand Ganesan retweetledi
anand mahindra
anand mahindra@anandmahindra·
How could these superstars not provide us with added #MondayMotivation? Double Gold medals. Double the motivation. And congratulations @ChessbaseIndia for the entertaining coverage But even more for your passion & commitment to this incredible game!
English
931
3.1K
25.9K
474.4K
Anand Ganesan retweetledi
International Chess Federation
🇮🇳 India wins the 45th FIDE #ChessOlympiad! 🏆 ♟️ Congratulations to Gukesh D, Praggnanandhaa R, Arjun Erigaisi, Vidit Gujrathi, Pentala Harikrishna and Srinath Narayanan (Captain)! 👏 👏 Gukesh D beats Vladimir Fedoseev, and Arjun Erigaisi prevails against Jan Subelj; India secures at least a tie in their match against Slovenia, and clinches the gold!
International Chess Federation tweet media
हिन्दी
253
2.4K
9.6K
526.9K
Anand Ganesan retweetledi
darius chapman
darius chapman@DariusChapman·
Expression of Interest - Novel rotating connector for LBBAP. I am developing TorqView for LBBAP and seeking your feedback. Please take 2 mins to fill in this form if you'd like to be one of the first to use it. forms.office.com/r/jcq5ahFcJz
darius chapman tweet media
English
2
10
37
4.5K
John Mandrola, MD
John Mandrola, MD@drjohnm·
On “average” there’s no question driverless cars outperform humans. As a cyclist, I look forward to driverless cars. The problem w driverless cars is the same as algorithms practicing medicine — tail events, way outside the algorithm.
Nate Silver@NateSilver538

I'm wary of overconfident predictions and I'd like to see more data from third parties. But I'm ~99% confident that driverless vehicles will substantially reduce auto accidents. understandingai.org/p/human-driver…

English
3
0
15
5.8K
Anand Ganesan retweetledi
darius chapman
darius chapman@DariusChapman·
Bringing TorqView to life has been a team effort. I’ve worked with, presented and chatted about TorqView with so many, from the @MDPP Medical Device Partnering Program, to expert clinicians like @curilakarol @Marek_Jastrz_EP, @Anand_Ganesan1 and many others!
English
2
1
8
951