Machine learning at the atomic scale

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Abstract

Statistical learning algorithms are finding more and more applications in science and technology. Atomic-scale modeling is no exception, with machine learning becoming commonplace as a tool to predict energy, forces and properties of molecules and condensed-phase systems. This short review summarizes recent progress in the field, focusing in particular on the problem of representing an atomic configuration in a mathematically robust and computationally efficient way. We also discuss some of the regression algorithms that have been used to construct surrogate models of atomic-scale properties. We then show examples of how the optimization of the machine-learning models can both incorporate and reveal insights onto the physical phenomena that underlie structure–property relations.

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Musil, F., & Ceriotti, M. (2019). Machine learning at the atomic scale. Chimia. Swiss Chemical Society. https://doi.org/10.2533/chimia.2019.972

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