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Collaborating Authors

 Prasad, Neha


BioNeMo Framework: a modular, high-performance library for AI model development in drug discovery

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Artificial Intelligence models encoding biology and chemistry are opening new routes to high-throughput and high-quality in-silico drug development. However, their training increasingly relies on computational scale, with recent protein language models (pLM) training on hundreds of graphical processing units (GPUs). We introduce the BioNeMo Framework to facilitate the training of computational biology and chemistry AI models across hundreds of GPUs. Its modular design allows the integration of individual components, such as data loaders, into existing workflows and is open to community contributions. We detail technical features of the BioNeMo Framework through use cases such as pLM pre-training and fine-tuning. On 256 NVIDIA A100s, BioNeMo Framework trains a three billion parameter BERT-based pLM on over one trillion tokens in 4.2 days. The BioNeMo Framework is open-source and free for everyone to use.


Optimal Transport using GANs for Lineage Tracing

arXiv.org Machine Learning

In this paper, we present Super-OT, a novel approach to computational lineage tracing that combines a supervised learning framework with optimal transport based on Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs). Unlike previous approaches to lineage tracing, Super-OT has the flexibility to integrate paired data. We benchmark Super-OT based on single-cell RNA-seq data against Waddington-OT, a popular approach for lineage tracing that also employs optimal transport. We show that Super-OT achieves gains over Waddington-OT in predicting the class outcome of cells during differentiation, since it allows the integration of additional information during \mbox{training.}