Barking up the right tree: an approach to search over molecule synthesis DAGs
John Bradshaw, Brooks Paige, Matt Kusner, Marwin Segler, Jose Miguel Hernández-Lobato
Spotlight presentation: Orals & Spotlights Track 15: COVID/Applications/Composition
on 2020-12-09T08:00:00-08:00 - 2020-12-09T08:10:00-08:00
on 2020-12-09T08:00:00-08:00 - 2020-12-09T08:10:00-08:00
Poster Session 4 (more posters)
on 2020-12-09T09:00:00-08:00 - 2020-12-09T11:00:00-08:00
GatherTown: Applications ( Town B2 - Spot C1 )
on 2020-12-09T09:00:00-08:00 - 2020-12-09T11:00:00-08:00
GatherTown: Applications ( Town B2 - Spot C1 )
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Toggle Abstract Paper (in Proceedings / .pdf)
Abstract: When designing new molecules with particular properties, it is not only important what to make but crucially how to make it. These instructions form a synthesis directed acyclic graph (DAG), describing how a large vocabulary of simple building blocks can be recursively combined through chemical reactions to create more complicated molecules of interest. In contrast, many current deep generative models for molecules ignore synthesizability. We therefore propose a deep generative model that better represents the real world process, by directly outputting molecule synthesis DAGs. We argue that this provides sensible inductive biases, ensuring that our model searches over the same chemical space that chemists would also have access to, as well as interoperability. We show that our approach is able to model chemical space well, producing a wide range of diverse molecules, and allows for unconstrained optimization of an inherently constrained problem: maximize certain chemical properties such that discovered molecules are synthesizable.