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Inside the Mind of a Medicinal Chemist: The Role of Human Bias in Compound Prioritization during Drug Discovery

Medicinal chemists’ “intuition” is critical for success in modern drug discovery. Early in the discovery process, chemists select a subset of compounds for further research, often from many viable candidates. These decisions determine the success of a discovery campaign, and ultimately what kind of...

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Autores principales: Kutchukian, Peter S., Vasilyeva, Nadya Y., Xu, Jordan, Lindvall, Mika K., Dillon, Michael P., Glick, Meir, Coley, John D., Brooijmans, Natasja
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3504051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23185259
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048476
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author Kutchukian, Peter S.
Vasilyeva, Nadya Y.
Xu, Jordan
Lindvall, Mika K.
Dillon, Michael P.
Glick, Meir
Coley, John D.
Brooijmans, Natasja
author_facet Kutchukian, Peter S.
Vasilyeva, Nadya Y.
Xu, Jordan
Lindvall, Mika K.
Dillon, Michael P.
Glick, Meir
Coley, John D.
Brooijmans, Natasja
author_sort Kutchukian, Peter S.
collection PubMed
description Medicinal chemists’ “intuition” is critical for success in modern drug discovery. Early in the discovery process, chemists select a subset of compounds for further research, often from many viable candidates. These decisions determine the success of a discovery campaign, and ultimately what kind of drugs are developed and marketed to the public. Surprisingly little is known about the cognitive aspects of chemists’ decision-making when they prioritize compounds. We investigate 1) how and to what extent chemists simplify the problem of identifying promising compounds, 2) whether chemists agree with each other about the criteria used for such decisions, and 3) how accurately chemists report the criteria they use for these decisions. Chemists were surveyed and asked to select chemical fragments that they would be willing to develop into a lead compound from a set of ∼4,000 available fragments. Based on each chemist’s selections, computational classifiers were built to model each chemist’s selection strategy. Results suggest that chemists greatly simplified the problem, typically using only 1–2 of many possible parameters when making their selections. Although chemists tended to use the same parameters to select compounds, differing value preferences for these parameters led to an overall lack of consensus in compound selections. Moreover, what little agreement there was among the chemists was largely in what fragments were undesirable. Furthermore, chemists were often unaware of the parameters (such as compound size) which were statistically significant in their selections, and overestimated the number of parameters they employed. A critical evaluation of the problem space faced by medicinal chemists and cognitive models of categorization were especially useful in understanding the low consensus between chemists.
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spelling pubmed-35040512012-11-26 Inside the Mind of a Medicinal Chemist: The Role of Human Bias in Compound Prioritization during Drug Discovery Kutchukian, Peter S. Vasilyeva, Nadya Y. Xu, Jordan Lindvall, Mika K. Dillon, Michael P. Glick, Meir Coley, John D. Brooijmans, Natasja PLoS One Research Article Medicinal chemists’ “intuition” is critical for success in modern drug discovery. Early in the discovery process, chemists select a subset of compounds for further research, often from many viable candidates. These decisions determine the success of a discovery campaign, and ultimately what kind of drugs are developed and marketed to the public. Surprisingly little is known about the cognitive aspects of chemists’ decision-making when they prioritize compounds. We investigate 1) how and to what extent chemists simplify the problem of identifying promising compounds, 2) whether chemists agree with each other about the criteria used for such decisions, and 3) how accurately chemists report the criteria they use for these decisions. Chemists were surveyed and asked to select chemical fragments that they would be willing to develop into a lead compound from a set of ∼4,000 available fragments. Based on each chemist’s selections, computational classifiers were built to model each chemist’s selection strategy. Results suggest that chemists greatly simplified the problem, typically using only 1–2 of many possible parameters when making their selections. Although chemists tended to use the same parameters to select compounds, differing value preferences for these parameters led to an overall lack of consensus in compound selections. Moreover, what little agreement there was among the chemists was largely in what fragments were undesirable. Furthermore, chemists were often unaware of the parameters (such as compound size) which were statistically significant in their selections, and overestimated the number of parameters they employed. A critical evaluation of the problem space faced by medicinal chemists and cognitive models of categorization were especially useful in understanding the low consensus between chemists. Public Library of Science 2012-11-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3504051/ /pubmed/23185259 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048476 Text en © 2012 Kutchukian et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kutchukian, Peter S.
Vasilyeva, Nadya Y.
Xu, Jordan
Lindvall, Mika K.
Dillon, Michael P.
Glick, Meir
Coley, John D.
Brooijmans, Natasja
Inside the Mind of a Medicinal Chemist: The Role of Human Bias in Compound Prioritization during Drug Discovery
title Inside the Mind of a Medicinal Chemist: The Role of Human Bias in Compound Prioritization during Drug Discovery
title_full Inside the Mind of a Medicinal Chemist: The Role of Human Bias in Compound Prioritization during Drug Discovery
title_fullStr Inside the Mind of a Medicinal Chemist: The Role of Human Bias in Compound Prioritization during Drug Discovery
title_full_unstemmed Inside the Mind of a Medicinal Chemist: The Role of Human Bias in Compound Prioritization during Drug Discovery
title_short Inside the Mind of a Medicinal Chemist: The Role of Human Bias in Compound Prioritization during Drug Discovery
title_sort inside the mind of a medicinal chemist: the role of human bias in compound prioritization during drug discovery
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3504051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23185259
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048476
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