Back to Search Start Over

Context-aware knowledge selection and reliable model recommendation with ACCORDION.

Authors :
Ahmed, Yasmine
Telmer, Cheryl A.
Gaoxiang Zhou
Miskov-Zivanov, Natasa
Source :
Frontiers in Systems Biology; 2024, p01-13, 13p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

New discoveries and knowledge are summarized in thousands of published papers per year per scientific domain, making it incomprehensible for scientists to account for all available knowledge relevant for their studies. In this paper, we present ACCORDION (ACCelerating and Optimizing model RecommenDatIONs), a novel methodology and an expert system that retrieves and selects relevant knowledge from literature and databases to recommend models with correct structure and accurate behavior, enabling mechanistic explanations and predictions, and advancing understanding. ACCORDION introduces an approach that integrates knowledge retrieval, graph algorithms, clustering, simulation, and formal analysis. Here, we focus on biological systems, although the proposed methodology is applicable in other domains. We used ACCORDION in nine benchmark case studies and compared its performance with other previously published tools. We show that ACCORDION is: comprehensive, retrieving relevant knowledge from a range of literature sources through machine reading engines; very effective, reducing the error of the initial baseline model by more than 80%, recommending models that closely recapitulate desired behavior, and outperforming previously published tools; selective, recommending only the most relevant, contextspecific, and useful subset (15%-20%) of candidate knowledge in literature; diverse, accounting for several distinct criteria to recommend more than one solution, thus enabling alternative explanations or intervention directions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26740702
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Frontiers in Systems Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177138858
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fsysb.2024.1308292