The British scientist’s company employs artificial intelligence to drastically reduce the speed of drug development

It was early one morning in 1996 when Andrew Hopkins, then a PhD biophysics student at Oxford University, had a brainwave as he walked home from a late-night lab meeting.

He was trying to find molecules to fight HIV and to better understand drug resistance.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Is the sexiest place in the world Paris, Miami … or Andover?

Of all the towns in the UK, one has gone wild recently…

Butterflies, toads and lizards were devastated by extreme weather in 2022, says the National Trust

Butterflies, toads, bats, and lizards were among the creatures devastated by 2022’s…

Ratcatcher review – Lynne Ramsay’s haunting debut is a hallucinatory wonder

Ramsay’s brilliant rendering of a child’s experience during the 1975 Glasgow bin-collectors’…