29 research outputs found

    The Cost of Perfection for Matchings in Graphs

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    Perfect matchings and maximum weight matchings are two fundamental combinatorial structures. We consider the ratio between the maximum weight of a perfect matching and the maximum weight of a general matching. Motivated by the computer graphics application in triangle meshes, where we seek to convert a triangulation into a quadrangulation by merging pairs of adjacent triangles, we focus mainly on bridgeless cubic graphs. First, we characterize graphs that attain the extreme ratios. Second, we present a lower bound for all bridgeless cubic graphs. Third, we present upper bounds for subclasses of bridgeless cubic graphs, most of which are shown to be tight. Additionally, we present tight bounds for the class of regular bipartite graphs

    Improving Molecular Properties Prediction Through Latent Space Fusion

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    Pre-trained Language Models have emerged as promising tools for predicting molecular properties, yet their development is in its early stages, necessitating further research to enhance their efficacy and address challenges such as generalization and sample efficiency. In this paper, we present a multi-view approach that combines latent spaces derived from state-of-the-art chemical models. Our approach relies on two pivotal elements: the embeddings derived from MHG-GNN, which represent molecular structures as graphs, and MoLFormer embeddings rooted in chemical language. The attention mechanism of MoLFormer is able to identify relations between two atoms even when their distance is far apart, while the GNN of MHG-GNN can more precisely capture relations among multiple atoms closely located. In this work, we demonstrate the superior performance of our proposed multi-view approach compared to existing state-of-the-art methods, including MoLFormer-XL, which was trained on 1.1 billion molecules, particularly in intricate tasks such as predicting clinical trial drug toxicity and inhibiting HIV replication. We assessed our approach using six benchmark datasets from MoleculeNet, where it outperformed competitors in five of them. Our study highlights the potential of latent space fusion and feature integration for advancing molecular property prediction. In this work, we use small versions of MHG-GNN and MoLFormer, which opens up an opportunity for further improvement when our approach uses a larger-scale dataset.Comment: 8 Pages, 4 Figures - Submited to the AI4Science Workshop - Neurips 202

    Position Paper on Dataset Engineering to Accelerate Science

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    Data is a critical element in any discovery process. In the last decades, we observed exponential growth in the volume of available data and the technology to manipulate it. However, data is only practical when one can structure it for a well-defined task. For instance, we need a corpus of text broken into sentences to train a natural language machine-learning model. In this work, we will use the token \textit{dataset} to designate a structured set of data built to perform a well-defined task. Moreover, the dataset will be used in most cases as a blueprint of an entity that at any moment can be stored as a table. Specifically, in science, each area has unique forms to organize, gather and handle its datasets. We believe that datasets must be a first-class entity in any knowledge-intensive process, and all workflows should have exceptional attention to datasets' lifecycle, from their gathering to uses and evolution. We advocate that science and engineering discovery processes are extreme instances of the need for such organization on datasets, claiming for new approaches and tooling. Furthermore, these requirements are more evident when the discovery workflow uses artificial intelligence methods to empower the subject-matter expert. In this work, we discuss an approach to bringing datasets as a critical entity in the discovery process in science. We illustrate some concepts using material discovery as a use case. We chose this domain because it leverages many significant problems that can be generalized to other science fields.Comment: Published at 2nd Annual AAAI Workshop on AI to Accelerate Science and Engineering (AI2ASE) https://ai-2-ase.github.io/papers/16%5cSubmission%5cAAAI_Dataset_Engineering-8.pd

    Beyond Chemical Language: A Multimodal Approach to Enhance Molecular Property Prediction

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    We present a novel multimodal language model approach for predicting molecular properties by combining chemical language representation with physicochemical features. Our approach, MULTIMODAL-MOLFORMER, utilizes a causal multistage feature selection method that identifies physicochemical features based on their direct causal effect on a specific target property. These causal features are then integrated with the vector space generated by molecular embeddings from MOLFORMER. In particular, we employ Mordred descriptors as physicochemical features and identify the Markov blanket of the target property, which theoretically contains the most relevant features for accurate prediction. Our results demonstrate a superior performance of our proposed approach compared to existing state-of-the-art algorithms, including the chemical language-based MOLFORMER and graph neural networks, in predicting complex tasks such as biodegradability and PFAS toxicity estimation. Moreover, we demonstrate the effectiveness of our feature selection method in reducing the dimensionality of the Mordred feature space while maintaining or improving the model's performance. Our approach opens up promising avenues for future research in molecular property prediction by harnessing the synergistic potential of both chemical language and physicochemical features, leading to enhanced performance and advancements in the field.Comment: 14 pages, 6 Figures, 5 tables. Submited to NEURIPS 2023, Under revie

    Toward Human-AI Co-creation to Accelerate Material Discovery

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    There is an increasing need in our society to achieve faster advances in Science to tackle urgent problems, such as climate changes, environmental hazards, sustainable energy systems, pandemics, among others. In certain domains like chemistry, scientific discovery carries the extra burden of assessing risks of the proposed novel solutions before moving to the experimental stage. Despite several recent advances in Machine Learning and AI to address some of these challenges, there is still a gap in technologies to support end-to-end discovery applications, integrating the myriad of available technologies into a coherent, orchestrated, yet flexible discovery process. Such applications need to handle complex knowledge management at scale, enabling knowledge consumption and production in a timely and efficient way for subject matter experts (SMEs). Furthermore, the discovery of novel functional materials strongly relies on the development of exploration strategies in the chemical space. For instance, generative models have gained attention within the scientific community due to their ability to generate enormous volumes of novel molecules across material domains. These models exhibit extreme creativity that often translates in low viability of the generated candidates. In this work, we propose a workbench framework that aims at enabling the human-AI co-creation to reduce the time until the first discovery and the opportunity costs involved. This framework relies on a knowledge base with domain and process knowledge, and user-interaction components to acquire knowledge and advise the SMEs. Currently,the framework supports four main activities: generative modeling, dataset triage, molecule adjudication, and risk assessment.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, NeurIPS 2022 WS: AI4Scienc
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