Ten things i 'hate' about refinement

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Abstract

Macromolecular refinement is an optimization process that aims to produce the most likely macromolecular structural model in the light of experimental data. As such, macromolecular refinement is one of the most complex optimization problems in wide use. Macromolecular refinement programs have to deal with the complex relationship between the parameters of the atomic model and the experimental data, as well as a large number of types of prior knowledge about chemical structure. This paper draws attention to areas of unfinished business in the field of macromolecular refinement. In it, we describe ten refinement topics that we think deserve attention and discuss directions leading to macromolecular refinement software that would make the best use of modern computer resources to meet the needs of structural biologists of the twenty-first century.

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Roversi, P., & Tronrud, D. E. (2021). Ten things i “hate” about refinement. Acta Crystallographica Section D: Structural Biology, 77, 1497–1515. https://doi.org/10.1107/S2059798321011700

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