Title :
Feature Selection Modelling for Percutaneous Absorption across Synthetic Membranes
Author :
Binjumah, Weam M. ; Yi Sun ; Hewitt, Mark ; Adams, Rene ; Davey, Neil ; Gullick, Darren R. ; Wilkinson, Simon C. ; Cronin, Mark ; Moss, Gary P.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, UK
Abstract :
Predicting the rate of percutaneous absorption across mammalian and artificial membranes is a complex problem. In previous studies, prediction and accuracy are approached using different machine learning models. Results show that Gaussian processes provided the best result, based on a range of statistical measures. In general the ultimate aim of these machine learning experiments is to try to understand, analyze and predict the percutaneous absorption of drugs across human skin. One way to do this is to select the best set of chemical descriptors and the dataset of synthetic (Polydimethyl siloxane, PDMS) membranes, containing so many descriptors, is considered a suitable dataset to use in this study. Hence, one of the main purposes of the study is to use feature selection methods to select the molecular properties that exert the most important influence on percutaneous absorption across PDMS membranes, in the hope that this will better inform studies on human skin.
Keywords :
Gaussian processes; biochemistry; biomembranes; drugs; feature extraction; feature selection; learning (artificial intelligence); medical computing; physiological models; polymers; reaction kinetics theory; reaction rate constants; skin; sorption; surface chemistry; Gaussian processes; PDMS membrane; artificial membrane; chemical descriptor set selection; drug percutaneous absorption; feature selection modelling; human skin; machine learning experiment; machine learning model; mammalian membrane; molecular property effect; molecular property selection; percutaneous absorption accuracy; percutaneous absorption rate prediction; polydimethyl siloxane membrane; statistical measure range; synthetic membrane dataset; Absorption; Educational institutions; Feature extraction; Ground penetrating radar; Permeability; Principal component analysis; Skin; Gaussian process; feature extraction techniques; machine learning methods; percutaneous absorption;
Conference_Titel :
Tools with Artificial Intelligence (ICTAI), 2014 IEEE 26th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Limassol
DOI :
10.1109/ICTAI.2014.155