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Biochemical knowledge discovery using Inductive Logic
Programming
S. Muggleton,
A. Srinivasan,
R. King,
and M. Sternberg.
In H. Motoda, editor, Proceedings of the first Conference on Discovery
Science, Berlin, 1998. More behind this link.. Springer-Verlag
Abstract
Machine Learning algorithms are being increasingly used for knowledge discovery
tasks. Approaches can be broadly divided by distinguishing discovery of
procedural from that of declarative knowledge. Client requirements determine
which of these is appropriate. This paper discusses an experimental
application of machine learning in an area related to drug design. The
bottleneck here is in finding appropriate constraints to reduce the large
number of candidate molecules to be synthesised and tested. Such constraints
can be viewed as declarative specifications of the structural elements
necessary for high medicinal activity and low toxicity. The first-order
representation used within Inductive Logic Programming (ILP) provides an
appropriate description language for such constraints. Within this
application area knowledge accreditation requires not only a demonstration of
predictive accuracy but also, and crucially, a certification of novel insight
into the structural chemistry. This paper describes an experiment in which
the ILP system Progol was used to obtain structural constraints associated
with mutagenicity of molecules. In doing so Progol found a new indicator of
mutagenicity within a subset of previously published data. This subset was
already known not to be amenable to statistical regression, though its
complement was adequately explained by a linear model. According to the
combined accuracy/explanation criterion provided in this paper, on both
subsets comparative trials show that Progol's structurally-oriented
hypotheses are preferable to those of other machine learning algorithms.
BibTeX entry.
Other publications
S H Muggleton,
stephen@cs.york.ac.uk,
A Srinivasan,
Ashwin.Srinivasan@comlab.ox.ac.uk. Last modified on Wednesday 9 April 2003 at 18:31. © 2003 ILPnet2