HypBO: Accelerating Black-Box Scientific Experiments Using Experts' Hypotheses

August 22, 2023 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐Ÿ› International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence

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Authors Abdoulatif Cisse, Xenophon Evangelopoulos, Sam Carruthers, Vladimir V. Gusev, Andrew I. Cooper arXiv ID 2308.11787 Category cs.LG: Machine Learning Cross-listed cs.HC Citations 7 Venue International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Robotics and automation offer massive accelerations for solving intractable, multivariate scientific problems such as materials discovery, but the available search spaces can be dauntingly large. Bayesian optimization (BO) has emerged as a popular sample-efficient optimization engine, thriving in tasks where no analytic form of the target function/property is known. Here, we exploit expert human knowledge in the form of hypotheses to direct Bayesian searches more quickly to promising regions of chemical space. Previous methods have used underlying distributions derived from existing experimental measurements, which is unfeasible for new, unexplored scientific tasks. Also, such distributions cannot capture intricate hypotheses. Our proposed method, which we call HypBO, uses expert human hypotheses to generate improved seed samples. Unpromising seeds are automatically discounted, while promising seeds are used to augment the surrogate model data, thus achieving better-informed sampling. This process continues in a global versus local search fashion, organized in a bilevel optimization framework. We validate the performance of our method on a range of synthetic functions and demonstrate its practical utility on a real chemical design task where the use of expert hypotheses accelerates the search performance significantly.
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