Abstract
We are interested in the automation of science for both philosophical and technological reasons. To this end we have built the first automated system that is capable of automatically: originating hypotheses to explain data, devising experiments to test these hypotheses, physically running these experiments using a laboratory robot, interpreting the results, and then repeat the cycle. We call such automated systems “Robot Scientists”. We applied our first Robot Scientist to predicting the function of genes in a well-understood part of the metabolism of the yeast S. cerevisiae. For background knowledge, we built a logical model of metabolism in Prolog. The experiments consisted of growing mutant yeast strains with known genes knocked out on specified growth media. The results of these experiments allowed the Robot Scientist to test hypotheses it had abductively inferred from the logical model. In empirical tests, the Robot Scientist experiment selection methodology outperformed both randomly selecting experiments, and a greedy strategy of always choosing the experiment of lowest cost; it was also as good as the best humans tested at the task. To extend this proof of principle result to the discovery of novel knowledge we require new hardware that is fully automated, a model of all of the known metabolism of yeast, and an efficient way of inferring probable hypotheses. We have made progress in all of these areas, and we are currently 6building a new Robot Scientist that we hope will be able to automatically discover new biological knowledge.
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Keywords
- Quantitative Structure Activity Relationship
- Biological Knowledge
- Inductive Logic Programming
- Laboratory Information Management System
- Average Classification Accuracy
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.
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© 2005 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
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King, R.D., Young, M., Clare, A.J., Whelan, K.E., Rowland, J. (2005). The Robot Scientist Project. In: Hoffmann, A., Motoda, H., Scheffer, T. (eds) Discovery Science. DS 2005. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 3735. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/11563983_4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/11563983_4
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