Mikhail Tsitsvero

2papers

2 Papers

CHEM-PHJul 16, 2022
Learning inducing points and uncertainty on molecular data by scalable variational Gaussian processes

Mikhail Tsitsvero, Mingoo Jin, Andrey Lyalin

Uncertainty control and scalability to large datasets are the two main issues for the deployment of Gaussian process (GP) models within the autonomous machine learning-based prediction pipelines in material science and chemistry. One way to address both of these issues is by introducing the latent inducing point variables and choosing the right approximation for the marginal log-likelihood objective. Here, we empirically show that variational learning of the inducing points in a molecular descriptor space improves the prediction of energies and atomic forces on two molecular dynamics datasets. First, we show that variational GPs can learn to represent the configurations of the molecules of different types that were not present within the initialization set of configurations. We provide a comparison of alternative log-likelihood training objectives and variational distributions. Among several evaluated approximate marginal log-likelihood objectives, we show that predictive log-likelihood provides excellent uncertainty estimates at the slight expense of predictive quality. Furthermore, we extend our study to a large molecular crystal system, showing that variational GP models perform well for predicting atomic forces by efficiently learning a sparse representation of the dataset.

CHEM-PHNov 26, 2025
Accelerating Materials Discovery: Learning a Universal Representation of Chemical Processes for Cross-Domain Property Prediction

Mikhail Tsitsvero, Atsuyuki Nakao, Hisaki Ikebata

Experimental validation of chemical processes is slow and costly, limiting exploration in materials discovery. Machine learning can prioritize promising candidates, but existing data in patents and literature is heterogeneous and difficult to use. We introduce a universal directed-tree process-graph representation that unifies unstructured text, molecular structures, and numeric measurements into a single machine-readable format. To learn from this structured data, we developed a multi-modal graph neural network with a property-conditioned attention mechanism. Trained on approximately 700,000 process graphs from nearly 9,000 diverse documents, our model learns semantically rich embeddings that generalize across domains. When fine-tuned on compact, domain-specific datasets, the pretrained model achieves strong performance, demonstrating that universal process representations learned at scale transfer effectively to specialized prediction tasks with minimal additional data.