That's progress! A century ago we'd need an infinite amount of monkeys
typing on an infinite amount of typewriters to produce a single paper. Now
we need just a finite amount of gamers to produce 7+ models to get one
that looks quite like a folded protein. And it saved an heavy atom soak as
wel
On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 6:39 AM, Dirk Kostrewa
wrote:
> Great! Maybe, they should add an extra term for correlation of Fcalc to
> Fobs (or LLG or R) to their game. I wonder, if structures could be solved ab
> inition by players, then :-).
>
Actually, Kam Zhang's group did something exactly like t
Great! Maybe, they should add an extra term for correlation of Fcalc to
Fobs (or LLG or R) to their game. I wonder, if structures could be
solved ab inition by players, then :-).
Best regards,
Dirk.
Am 19.09.11 12:33, schrieb Kevin Cowtan:
"Crystal structure of a monomeric retroviral protease
"Crystal structure of a monomeric retroviral protease solved by protein
folding game players"
The paper (Nature SB):
http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/zoran/NSMBfoldit-2011.pdf
The game:
http://fold.it/portal/