ABSTRACT Introduction Artificial intelligence (AI) has seen a massive resurgence in recent years with wide successes in computer vision, natural language processing, and games. The similar creation of robust and… Click to show full abstract
ABSTRACT Introduction Artificial intelligence (AI) has seen a massive resurgence in recent years with wide successes in computer vision, natural language processing, and games. The similar creation of robust and accurate AI models for ADME/Tox endpoint and activity prediction would be revolutionary to drug discovery pipelines. There have been numerous demonstrations of successful applications, but a key challenge remains: how generalizable are these predictive models? Areas covered The authors present a summary of current promising components of AI models in the context of early drug discovery where ADME/Tox endpoint and activity prediction is the main driver of the iterative drug design process. Following that is a review of applicability domains and dataset construction considerations which determine generalizability bottlenecks for AI deployment. Further reviewed is the role of promising learning frameworks – multitask, transfer, and meta learning – which leverage auxiliary data to overcome issues of generalizability. Expert opinion The authors conclude that the most promising direction toward integrating reliable and informative AI models into the drug discovery pipeline is a conjunction of learned feature representations, deep learning, and novel learning frameworks. Such a solution would address the sparse and incomplete datasets that are available for key endpoints related to drug discovery.
               
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