A black-box re-weighting analysis can correct flawed simulation data

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Abstract

There is a great need for improved statistical sampling in a range of physical, chemical, and biological systems. Even simulations based on correct algorithms suffer from statistical error, which can be substantial or even dominant when slow processes are involved. Further, in key biomolecular applications, such as the determination of protein structures from NMR data, non-Boltzmann-distributed ensembles are generated. We therefore have developed the "black-box" strategy for reweighting a set of configurations generated by arbitrary means to produce an ensemble distributed according to any target distribution. In contrast to previous algorithmic efforts, the black-box approach exploits the configuration-space density observed in a simulation, rather than assuming a desired distribution has been generated. Successful implementations of the strategy, which reduce both statistical error and bias, are developed for a one-dimensional system, and a 50-atom peptide, for which the correct 250-to-1 population ratio is recovered from a heavily biased ensemble. © 2008 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA.

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Ytreberg, F. M., & Zuckerman, D. M. (2008). A black-box re-weighting analysis can correct flawed simulation data. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 105(23), 7982–7987. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0706063105

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