
Jure Leskovec, a Stanford computer science professor who supervised the work, said the agent had been released as an open-source system with a web interface so that biologists could use it without writing code.
“We have over 10,000 scientists all over the world using the system for their everyday tasks,” Leskovec said on Tuesday.
In the journal Science this week, the researcher said the system, called Biomni, could turn a plain-language request into an entire research workflow – from searching databases and writing analysis code to finding disease-causing genes and even creating step-by-step lab instructions that scientists successfully followed in real experiments.
In one test, the virtual biologist was given hundreds of raw files collected from wearable devices and asked to look for biological patterns. It cleaned the data, ran the analysis and generated new hypotheses.

Don't Miss:
-
Ebola outbreak is ‘fastest growing ever’ as 600 die in DR Congo
-
Turkish president’s ‘unusual’ gift to Nato leaders: 1 revolver, 6 bullets
-
Florida airport renamed ‘Trump’ in latest push to expand his brand
-
8 Corpses With Narco Message Threatening Meth Dealers Found in El Bosque, Chiapas
-
A World of Opportunity Begins at Canadian International School of Hong Kong

Where Have All The Soldiers Gone?
Crypto giant Circle rebuffed efforts to help scam victims, police say
Australia’s Grand Nuclear Submarine-Fleet Plan