1,836 research outputs found
Simulation Intelligence: Towards a New Generation of Scientific Methods
The original "Seven Motifs" set forth a roadmap of essential methods for the
field of scientific computing, where a motif is an algorithmic method that
captures a pattern of computation and data movement. We present the "Nine
Motifs of Simulation Intelligence", a roadmap for the development and
integration of the essential algorithms necessary for a merger of scientific
computing, scientific simulation, and artificial intelligence. We call this
merger simulation intelligence (SI), for short. We argue the motifs of
simulation intelligence are interconnected and interdependent, much like the
components within the layers of an operating system. Using this metaphor, we
explore the nature of each layer of the simulation intelligence operating
system stack (SI-stack) and the motifs therein: (1) Multi-physics and
multi-scale modeling; (2) Surrogate modeling and emulation; (3)
Simulation-based inference; (4) Causal modeling and inference; (5) Agent-based
modeling; (6) Probabilistic programming; (7) Differentiable programming; (8)
Open-ended optimization; (9) Machine programming. We believe coordinated
efforts between motifs offers immense opportunity to accelerate scientific
discovery, from solving inverse problems in synthetic biology and climate
science, to directing nuclear energy experiments and predicting emergent
behavior in socioeconomic settings. We elaborate on each layer of the SI-stack,
detailing the state-of-art methods, presenting examples to highlight challenges
and opportunities, and advocating for specific ways to advance the motifs and
the synergies from their combinations. Advancing and integrating these
technologies can enable a robust and efficient hypothesis-simulation-analysis
type of scientific method, which we introduce with several use-cases for
human-machine teaming and automated science
Pandemic Drugs at Pandemic Speed: Infrastructure for Accelerating COVID-19 Drug Discovery with Hybrid Machine Learning- and Physics-based Simulations on High Performance Computers
The race to meet the challenges of the global pandemic has served as a reminder that the existing drug discovery process is expensive, inefficient and slow. There is a major bottleneck screening the vast number of potential small molecules to shortlist lead compounds for antiviral drug development. New opportunities to accelerate drug discovery lie at the interface between machine learning methods, in this case, developed for linear accelerators, and physics-based methods. The two in silico methods, each have their own advantages and limitations which, interestingly, complement each other. Here, we present an innovative infrastructural development that combines both approaches to accelerate drug discovery. The scale of the potential resulting workflow is such that it is dependent on supercomputing to achieve extremely high throughput. We have demonstrated the viability of this workflow for the study of inhibitors for four COVID-19 target proteins and our ability to perform the required large-scale calculations to identify lead antiviral compounds through repurposing on a variety of supercomputers
Toward real-world automated antibody design with combinatorial Bayesian optimization
Antibodies are multimeric proteins capable of highly specific molecular recognition. The complementarity determining region 3 of the antibody variable heavy chain (CDRH3) often dominates antigen-binding specificity. Hence, it is a priority to design optimal antigen-specific CDRH3 to develop therapeutic antibodies. The combinatorial structure of CDRH3 sequences makes it impossible to query binding-affinity oracles exhaustively. Moreover, antibodies are expected to have high target specificity and developability. Here, we present AntBO, a combinatorial Bayesian optimization framework utilizing a CDRH3 trust region for an in silico design of antibodies with favorable developability scores. The in silico experiments on 159 antigens demonstrate that AntBO is a step toward practically viable in vitro antibody design. In under 200 calls to the oracle, AntBO suggests antibodies outperforming the best binding sequence from 6.9 million experimentally obtained CDRH3s. Additionally, AntBO finds very-high-affinity CDRH3 in only 38 protein designs while requiring no domain knowledge
Artificial Intelligence for Science in Quantum, Atomistic, and Continuum Systems
Advances in artificial intelligence (AI) are fueling a new paradigm of
discoveries in natural sciences. Today, AI has started to advance natural
sciences by improving, accelerating, and enabling our understanding of natural
phenomena at a wide range of spatial and temporal scales, giving rise to a new
area of research known as AI for science (AI4Science). Being an emerging
research paradigm, AI4Science is unique in that it is an enormous and highly
interdisciplinary area. Thus, a unified and technical treatment of this field
is needed yet challenging. This work aims to provide a technically thorough
account of a subarea of AI4Science; namely, AI for quantum, atomistic, and
continuum systems. These areas aim at understanding the physical world from the
subatomic (wavefunctions and electron density), atomic (molecules, proteins,
materials, and interactions), to macro (fluids, climate, and subsurface) scales
and form an important subarea of AI4Science. A unique advantage of focusing on
these areas is that they largely share a common set of challenges, thereby
allowing a unified and foundational treatment. A key common challenge is how to
capture physics first principles, especially symmetries, in natural systems by
deep learning methods. We provide an in-depth yet intuitive account of
techniques to achieve equivariance to symmetry transformations. We also discuss
other common technical challenges, including explainability,
out-of-distribution generalization, knowledge transfer with foundation and
large language models, and uncertainty quantification. To facilitate learning
and education, we provide categorized lists of resources that we found to be
useful. We strive to be thorough and unified and hope this initial effort may
trigger more community interests and efforts to further advance AI4Science
- …