Paper List
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Ill-Conditioning in Dictionary-Based Dynamic-Equation Learning: A Systems Biology Case Study
This paper addresses the critical challenge of numerical ill-conditioning and multicollinearity in library-based sparse regression methods (e.g., SIND...
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Hybrid eTFCE–GRF: Exact Cluster-Size Retrieval with Analytical pp-Values for Voxel-Based Morphometry
This paper addresses the computational bottleneck in voxel-based neuroimaging analysis by providing a method that delivers exact cluster-size retrieva...
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abx_amr_simulator: A simulation environment for antibiotic prescribing policy optimization under antimicrobial resistance
This paper addresses the critical challenge of quantitatively evaluating antibiotic prescribing policies under realistic uncertainty and partial obser...
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PesTwin: a biology-informed Digital Twin for enabling precision farming
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck in precision agriculture: the inability to accurately forecast pest outbreaks in real-time, leading to su...
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Equivariant Asynchronous Diffusion: An Adaptive Denoising Schedule for Accelerated Molecular Conformation Generation
This paper addresses the core challenge of generating physically plausible 3D molecular structures by bridging the gap between autoregressive methods ...
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Omics Data Discovery Agents
This paper addresses the core challenge of making published omics data computationally reusable by automating the extraction, quantification, and inte...
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Single-cell directional sensing at ultra-low chemoattractant concentrations from extreme first-passage events
This work addresses the core challenge of how a cell can rapidly and accurately determine the direction of a chemoattractant source when the signal is...
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SDSR: A Spectral Divide-and-Conquer Approach for Species Tree Reconstruction
This paper addresses the computational bottleneck in reconstructing species trees from thousands of species and multiple genes by introducing a scalab...
Physics-Guided Surrogate Modeling for Machine Learning–Driven DLD Design Optimization
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Lehigh University | Computational Engineering Department, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory | Department of Industrial and Production Engineering, Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology | Precision Medicine Translational Research Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core bottleneck of translating microfluidic DLD devices from research prototypes to clinical applications by replacing weeks-long empirical design cycles with a physics-guided machine learning framework that delivers fabrication-ready specifications in under 60 seconds.
核心创新
- Methodology First complete inverse design framework for DLD that transforms measured cellular deformability into optimized device geometry through physics-guided machine learning.
- Methodology Integration of high-fidelity Lattice-Boltzmann/Immersed-Boundary simulations with XGBoost surrogate models achieving sub-degree predictive accuracy (R²=0.9999, MSE=2×10⁻⁴).
- Methodology Statistical quantification of deformability-geometry interactions via Type II ANOVA revealing significant interaction effects (F=48.23, p<10⁻³⁴) despite geometric dominance of main effects.
主要结论
- Geometric parameters dominate migration angle variance (F=63.72, p<10⁻³⁷), but cellular deformability exerts statistically significant effects through interactions with device geometry (F=48.23, p<10⁻³⁴).
- The XGBoost surrogate model achieves exceptional predictive accuracy (R²=0.9999, MSE=2×10⁻⁴), enabling sub-degree migration angle prediction across the design space.
- Bayesian optimization via tree-structured Parzen estimation identifies optimal DLD architectures in under 60 seconds, reducing design iteration from weeks of experimental prototyping to minutes of automated computation.
摘要: Microfluidic separation technologies have transformed label-free cell sorting by exploiting intrinsic biophysical properties, yet the translation of these platforms from laboratory prototypes to clinical applications remains constrained by the empirical, trial-and-error nature of device design. Deterministic Lateral Displacement (DLD) represents a paradigmatic example: while demonstrating robust discrimination of cells by size, shape, and deformability across diverse applications including circulating tumor cell isolation and malaria diagnostics, DLD performance exhibits extreme sensitivity to the coupled interplay between cellular mechanical phenotype and micron-scale geometric parameters, necessitating iterative fabrication-testing cycles that span weeks to months. We present the first complete inverse design framework that transforms measured cellular deformability into fabrication-ready DLD specifications through physics-guided machine learning. Our approach integrates high-fidelity lattice-Boltzmann and immersed-boundary simulations with gradient-boosted surrogate models to systematically map cellular mechanical properties to migration behavior across manufacturing-feasible geometric configurations (pillar radius, gap, periodicity). Type II ANOVA quantifies the relative influence of these parameters, revealing that while geometric factors dominate migration angle variance (F=63.72, p<10−37), cellular deformability exerts statistically significant effects through interactions with device geometry (F=48.23, p<10−34). The resulting XGBoost surrogate achieves sub-degree predictive accuracy (R2=0.9999, MSE =2×10−4), enabling Bayesian optimization via tree-structured Parzen estimation to identify optimal array architectures in under 60 seconds—reducing design iteration from weeks of experimental prototyping to minutes of automated computation. By deploying this validated pipeline as an accessible web application that accepts experimentally measured deformation indices and returns optimized device specifications with tolerance analysis, we democratize DLD design for researchers without specialized computational expertise, thereby accelerating the translation of microfluidic technologies from research-grade prototypes to application-specific, clinically deployable devices.