4.7 Article

Confronting pitfalls of AI-augmented molecular dynamics using statistical physics

期刊

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
卷 153, 期 23, 页码 -

出版社

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/5.0030931

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资金

  1. American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund [PRF60512-DNI6]
  2. National Institutes of Health [P41-GM104601]
  3. NCI-UMD Partnership for Integrative Cancer Research
  4. COMBINE fellowship [DGE-1632976]
  5. Beckman Institute Graduate Fellowship
  6. National Science Foundation [ACI-1548562]
  7. Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE) Bridges [CHE180027P]

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Artificial intelligence (AI)-based approaches have had indubitable impact across the sciences through the ability to extract relevant information from raw data. Recently, AI has also found use in enhancing the efficiency of molecular simulations, wherein AI derived slow modes are used to accelerate the simulation in targeted ways. However, while typical fields where AI is used are characterized by a plethora of data, molecular simulations, per construction, suffer from limited sampling and thus limited data. As such, the use of AI in molecular simulations can suffer from a dangerous situation where the AI-optimization could get stuck in spurious regimes, leading to incorrect characterization of the reaction coordinate (RC) for the problem at hand. When such an incorrect RC is then used to perform additional simulations, one could start to deviate progressively from the ground truth. To deal with this problem of spurious AI-solutions, here, we report a novel and automated algorithm using ideas from statistical mechanics. It is based on the notion that a more reliable AI-solution will be one that maximizes the timescale separation between slow and fast processes. To learn this timescale separation even from limited data, we use a maximum caliber-based framework. We show the applicability of this automatic protocol for three classic benchmark problems, namely, the conformational dynamics of a model peptide, ligand-unbinding from a protein, and folding/unfolding energy landscape of the C-terminal domain of protein G. We believe that our work will lead to increased and robust use of trustworthy AI in molecular simulations of complex systems.

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