Alex Williams

1.7K posts

Alex Williams banner
Alex Williams

Alex Williams

@ItsNeuronal

Asst Prof @NYU_CNS + Project Leader @FlatironCCN studying Computational + Statistical Neuroscience.

New York, NY เข้าร่วม Temmuz 2011
1.3K กำลังติดตาม4.6K ผู้ติดตาม
ทวีตที่ปักหมุด
Alex Williams
Alex Williams@ItsNeuronal·
Here is a recording of my talk @CogCompNeuro last week on quantifying similarity in neural recordings Very much enjoyed the Keynote + Tutorial format for the conference. Links to our tutorial notebook below 👇 youtube.com/live/-xmLMWC2Y…
YouTube video
YouTube
English
1
20
95
17.6K
Alex Williams รีทวีตแล้ว
Victor Geadah
Victor Geadah@vgeadah·
Neural dynamics are complex, varying in time and across experimental conditions. 🎉 Excited to share our #NeurIPS2025 work: we introduce Conditionally Linear Dynamical Systems (CLDS) as an interpretable and flexible model of neural dynamics. 🧵[1/9]
English
1
7
28
2.6K
Alex Williams รีทวีตแล้ว
Neuroscience at NYU Langone Health
Congrats to our very own Ipshita Zutshi on being awarded the Peter & Patricia Gruber International Research Award in Neuroscience!! #SfN25
Neuroscience at NYU Langone Health tweet media
English
5
3
54
6.4K
Alex Williams รีทวีตแล้ว
Ro Khanna
Ro Khanna@RoKhanna·
Senator Schumer is no longer effective and should be replaced. If you can’t lead the fight to stop healthcare premiums from skyrocketing for Americans, what will you fight for?
English
4.1K
12.3K
82.1K
5.5M
Alex Williams รีทวีตแล้ว
Diana Cai
Diana Cai@dianarycai·
The application for a research fellowship at the Flatiron Institute in the Center for Computational Math is now live! This includes positions for ML and stats. The deadline is Dec 1. Links below with more details.
English
2
18
107
13.2K
Alex Williams รีทวีตแล้ว
Amin Nejatbakhsh
Amin Nejatbakhsh@aminejat·
Excited to announce that our paper on "Comparing noisy neural population dynamics using optimal transport distances" has been selected for an oral presentation in #ICLR2025 (1.8% top papers). Check the thread for paper details (0/n). Presentation info: iclr.cc/virtual/2025/o….
English
1
7
27
3.5K
Alex Williams รีทวีตแล้ว
Scott Linderman
Scott Linderman@scott_linderman·
Excited to share our JOSS paper (joss.theoj.org/papers/10.2110…) and code (github.com/probml/dynamax)! Special thanks to our reviewers — Dynamax v1.0 is much improved thanks to their feedback!
Kevin Patrick Murphy@sirbayes

I am pleased to announce that the paper on our Dynamax Jax library for SSMs is now available at joss.theoj.org/papers/10.2110…. Code is at github.com/probml/dynamax/. Joint work with @scott_linderman @grrddm @petergchang @karalleyna @GilesHD @mxinglongli

English
0
11
51
4.6K
Alex Williams รีทวีตแล้ว
UAW Region 6
UAW Region 6@uawregion6·
Thousands of UAW members are international workers who conduct critical research to advance lifesaving treatments for diseases like cancer, Alzheimer’s, and more. Hear from international scholars across the country why they're taking action on 4/8 to #KillTheCuts.
English
2
6
16
839
Alex Williams
Alex Williams@ItsNeuronal·
@GeoCalhoun520 The implication of that quote -- which you cite without any serious interrogation -- is that 70% of funds going out of NIH do not go to direct research costs. How much is this IDC cut projected to save NIH? Is it 55% (i.e. 70 - 15) of their disbursed funds? Is it even close?
English
1
0
0
17
George Calhoun
George Calhoun@GeoCalhoun520·
@ItsNeuronal Nope -- it's true for many grants, though not for all. In any case, that is a detail of the accounting which will be the topic of Part 2.
English
1
0
0
74
George Calhoun
George Calhoun@GeoCalhoun520·
The Universities are howling about the cut in R&D overhead -- but the reckoning is well-deserved. This gravy train has been a target for decades. forbes.com/sites/georgeca…
English
2
0
4
341
Alex Williams
Alex Williams@ItsNeuronal·
@GeoCalhoun520 Looking forward to you correcting the record then on "70% of the money that is supposed to go to R&D is siphoned off" because that's flat wrong.
English
1
0
0
8
George Calhoun
George Calhoun@GeoCalhoun520·
@ItsNeuronal There are two models for overhead assessment, which I would call the inclusive (or subtractive) and the additive – in the first, the indirect costs are indeed deducted fromt the total of the grant. There are many grants that work that way. More on that in Part 2 of this series.
English
1
0
0
27
Alex Williams รีทวีตแล้ว
UAW
UAW@UAW·
UAW Region 4 CAP mobilization happening TODAY: members across the region are calling key Senators and Congresspeople to demand "No Cuts to NIH Funding!" An attack on one of our members is an attack on all of us!
UAW tweet mediaUAW tweet mediaUAW tweet mediaUAW tweet media
English
3
20
61
13.4K
Alex Williams รีทวีตแล้ว
Pynapple
Pynapple@thepynapple·
Thank you to everyone who joined us for our first and second Pynapple & @nemos_neuro workshops of the year at @FlatironCCN , NYC! Stay tuned for future event announcements. #EastCoast
Pynapple tweet media
English
1
2
6
1.1K
Alex Williams
Alex Williams@ItsNeuronal·
@mbeisen @dorkmo Willing to grant that a fraction of indirects may get used for subscriptions (though I'd love to see a source!) Regardless your 4.5 bln figure feels misleading. This ~75% cut to indirects is on the order of ~4 billion. I doubt that 75% of indirects go to subscriptions!
English
1
0
0
180
Michael Eisen
Michael Eisen@mbeisen·
@dorkmo @ItsNeuronal Indirect. There’s a line in F&A contracts I’ve seen that’s earmarked for libraries specifically for journal subscriptions.
English
1
0
1
111
Michael Eisen
Michael Eisen@mbeisen·
Scientists and universities: defend indirects as a concept but not current indirect rates. Don't think there's waste in those numbers? We (US science) spend $4.5 billion on journals. That is HALF of the proposed cuts in indirects, and eliminating that spending would make science better!
English
55
71
661
122.2K
Alex Williams รีทวีตแล้ว
Alex Williams รีทวีตแล้ว
Jay Giri
Jay Giri@jaygirimd·
🧵 Many “hot takes” about the reduction of @NIH indirect grant costs to 15%. Let’s lay out the facts about the university grant management process & accounting. And then use this to project likely short and longer term impacts of the policy.
Jay Giri tweet media
English
58
289
1.1K
431K
Alex Williams รีทวีตแล้ว
Phil Metzger
Phil Metzger@DrPhiltill·
It seems few people know what an “indirect cost” is or why it has to be 40-60%. The reason the government forced universities to raise their indirect costs up to (typically) 40-60% was to force a huge amount of regulations on the universities while also minimizing the bookkeeping to comply with those regulations. This includes the work by contract managers, compliance lawyers, accountants, safety management, etc., who are required by the government per the terms of the contract. If universities had to allocate all those categories of labor to each contract hour-by-hour it would require too much bookkeeping, which would waste money. (I’m setting aside for now the question of whether or how much the regulations are wasting money and only discussing how you bookkeep the effort to comply with the regulations.) So to save money, while also requiring universities to do these types of work, the government requires universities to roll those categories of labor into “cost pools” that must be allocated as a percent of the technical work in each of the contracts. While the actual “overhead” might be only 15%, these pooled labor charges that are required by the government are typically much more. Second, the government doesn’t allow the universities to figure out their own indirect rates. These rates are determined by the federal government through audits every couple of years. The government then sends a document telling the university what rate to use for its cost pools. For example, the University of Colorado was told by the DHHS to use 54% (colorado.edu/controller/sit…) and U. Nebraska was told by DHHS to use 55.5% (uofnelincoln.sharepoint.com/sites/UNL-Spon…). 40-60% is not only reasonable to fulfill the terms of the contract, it is the rate that the government tells the university it can charge for all the work the government requires the university to do. So if the government wants to reduce the indirect rate to 15%, then it needs to do one of these two things: Either (A) eliminate all the federal regulations that force the universities to do those categories of work (compliance, accounting, management, safety management, tracking harmful chemicals, etc.) Or, (B) stop requiring universities to pool those real costs into the “indirect cost” category and allow universities to include them in the “direct costs” of the contract. If the government chooses (A), then the safety rails have been entirely removed. (Even if the government lowers the regulations without entirely eliminating them, the costs they impose will still be real costs that probably come out to more than 15%.) Or, if it chooses (B), then the direct costs will go way up and research will actually be less efficient because all the bookkeeping, not more efficient. But if the government caps the indirect rate at 15% without doing either (A) or (B), then it will be impossible to do research for the federal government without going bankrupt. That’s the worst possible choice. It will kill research in the US. Is that what we want? I can explain it for you but I can’t understand it for you. It’s up to the reader not to be ignorant.
English
91
288
1K
135.9K