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People can arrive at a given post from anywhere, and so it would be good to have a short intro on each post to put things into perspective and provide a pointer to the other content–it's nice to keep this intro fairly consistent across the series. Here's a draft but obviously open to edits.
Your Title Here
The Tabula Muris project is built on a large set of single-cell mRNA sequencing data, representing around 100000 cells from 20 organs and tissues from four mice. We are hopeful that this dataset will be broadly useful to the community as a place to validate findings, formulate new biological hypotheses, and benchmark novel methods and tools. To get the party started, we're publishing a series of posts on our blog that highlight different aspects of this dataset and the different research questions that it led us to explore.
Staring at this a little, I don't like the idea of putting this text right below a post-specific title. I think either it should go at the end of each post, or as a preface before the main text.
To clarify after some discussion: this is just a suggestion for this set of 4-5 posts, to tie them together. The future organization of the blog as whole can be something different, but I'd like to have the debut hang together in a coherent way.
People can arrive at a given post from anywhere, and so it would be good to have a short intro on each post to put things into perspective and provide a pointer to the other content–it's nice to keep this intro fairly consistent across the series. Here's a draft but obviously open to edits.
Your Title Here
The Tabula Muris project is built on a large set of single-cell mRNA sequencing data, representing around 100000 cells from 20 organs and tissues from four mice. We are hopeful that this dataset will be broadly useful to the community as a place to validate findings, formulate new biological hypotheses, and benchmark novel methods and tools. To get the party started, we're publishing a series of posts on our blog that highlight different aspects of this dataset and the different research questions that it led us to explore.
Posts in this series:
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