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Discovering H-Bonding Rules in Crystals with Inductive Logic Programming
Author(s) -
Howard Y. Ando,
Luc De Raedt,
Walter Luyten,
Elke Van Craenenbroeck,
Henk Vandecasteele,
Luc Van Meervelt
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
molecular pharmaceutics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.13
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 1543-8392
pISSN - 1543-8384
DOI - 10.1021/mp060034z
Subject(s) - inductive logic programming , computer science , hydrogen bond , crystal engineering , complement (music) , logic programming , molecule , artificial intelligence , theoretical computer science , chemistry , biochemistry , organic chemistry , complementation , gene , phenotype
In the domain of crystal engineering, various schemes have been proposed for the classification of hydrogen bonding (H-bonding) patterns observed in 3D crystal structures. In this study, the aim is to complement these schemes with rules that predict H-bonding in crystals from 2D structural information only. Modern computational power and the advances in inductive logic programming (ILP) can now provide computational chemistry with the opportunity for extracting structure-specific rules from large databases that can be incorporated into expert systems. ILP technology is here applied to H-bonding in crystals to develop a self-extracting expert system utilizing data in the Cambridge Structural Database of small molecule crystal structures. A clear increase in performance was observed when the ILP system DMax was allowed to refer to the local structural environment of the possible H-bond donor/acceptor pairs. This ability distinguishes ILP from more traditional approaches that build rules on the basis of global molecular properties.

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