4.7 Review

Multiscale Modeling Meets Machine Learning: What Can We Learn?

Journal

ARCHIVES OF COMPUTATIONAL METHODS IN ENGINEERING
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 1017-1037

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11831-020-09405-5

Keywords

Machine learning; Multiscale modeling; Physics-based simulation; Biomedicine

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [U01 HL116330, R01 AR074525, U01 EB022546, R01 CA197491, U24 EB028998, U01 HL116323, U01 HL142518, U01 EB017695, R01 EB014877, U01 HL119578]
  2. DARPA [HR0011199002]
  3. Toyota Research Institute [849910]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Machine learning excels in image recognition in fields like biomedicine, but struggles with sparse data. Integrating machine learning with multiscale modeling can create more efficient biological system models, benefiting both approaches.
Machine learning is increasingly recognized as a promising technology in the biological, biomedical, and behavioral sciences. There can be no argument that this technique is incredibly successful in image recognition with immediate applications in diagnostics including electrophysiology, radiology, or pathology, where we have access to massive amounts of annotated data. However, machine learning often performs poorly in prognosis, especially when dealing with sparse data. This is a field where classical physics-based simulation seems to remain irreplaceable. In this review, we identify areas in the biomedical sciences where machine learning and multiscale modeling can mutually benefit from one another: Machine learning can integrate physics-based knowledge in the form of governing equations, boundary conditions, or constraints to manage ill-posted problems and robustly handle sparse and noisy data; multiscale modeling can integrate machine learning to create surrogate models, identify system dynamics and parameters, analyze sensitivities, and quantify uncertainty to bridge the scales and understand the emergence of function. With a view towards applications in the life sciences, we discuss the state of the art of combining machine learning and multiscale modeling, identify applications and opportunities, raise open questions, and address potential challenges and limitations. We anticipate that it will stimulate discussion within the community of computational mechanics and reach out to other disciplines including mathematics, statistics, computer science, artificial intelligence, biomedicine, systems biology, and precision medicine to join forces towards creating robust and efficient models for biological systems.

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