Comparison of Selected Fusion Methods from the Abstract and Rank Levels in a System Using Pawlak’s Approach to Coalition Formation

Author(s):  
Małgorzata Przybyła-Kasperek
2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 178-189 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoyang Jing ◽  
Qimin Dong ◽  
Ruqian Lu ◽  
Qiwen Dong

Background:Protein inter-residue contacts prediction play an important role in the field of protein structure and function research. As a low-dimensional representation of protein tertiary structure, protein inter-residue contacts could greatly help de novo protein structure prediction methods to reduce the conformational search space. Over the past two decades, various methods have been developed for protein inter-residue contacts prediction.Objective:We provide a comprehensive and systematic review of protein inter-residue contacts prediction methods.Results:Protein inter-residue contacts prediction methods are roughly classified into five categories: correlated mutations methods, machine-learning methods, fusion methods, templatebased methods and 3D model-based methods. In this paper, firstly we describe the common definition of protein inter-residue contacts and show the typical application of protein inter-residue contacts. Then, we present a comprehensive review of the three main categories for protein interresidue contacts prediction: correlated mutations methods, machine-learning methods and fusion methods. Besides, we analyze the constraints for each category. Furthermore, we compare several representative methods on the CASP11 dataset and discuss performances of these methods in detail.Conclusion:Correlated mutations methods achieve better performances for long-range contacts, while the machine-learning method performs well for short-range contacts. Fusion methods could take advantage of the machine-learning and correlated mutations methods. Employing more effective fusion strategy could be helpful to further improve the performances of fusion methods.


Author(s):  
Amnon Rapoport ◽  
James P. Kahan ◽  
Sandra G. Funk ◽  
Abraham D. Horowitz
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Paul Chaisty ◽  
Nic Cheeseman ◽  
Timothy J. Power

This chapter summarizes the main parameters of coalitional presidentialism and the key concepts, definitions, explanatory frameworks, indicators, and propositions. It summarizes our understanding of coalitional presidentialism; the distinction between coalition formation and maintenance; the definition of coalitions; the multidimensional understanding of coalition management (the ‘presidential toolbox’); and an analytical framework that emphasizes the motivation of presidents to achieve cost minimization under constraints determined by system-level, coalition-level, and conjunctural factors. It also summarizes our main empirical findings: (1) the characteristics of presidential tools, (2) the substantive patterns of their deployment, (3) the factors that shape the costs of using these tools, (4) the actual (observed) costs of using them, and (5) the potential for imperfect substitutability of these tools. Finally, it concludes with some reflections on the current state of the research on comparative presidentialism.


Author(s):  
Jer Shyuan Ng ◽  
Wei Yang Bryan Lim ◽  
Hong-Ning Dai ◽  
Zehui Xiong ◽  
Jianqiang Huang ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document