npj Systems Biology and Applications (Aug 2017)

Performance of objective functions and optimisation procedures for parameter estimation in system biology models

  • Andrea Degasperi,
  • Dirk Fey,
  • Boris N. Kholodenko

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41540-017-0023-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Systems biology: Performance of parameter estimation procedures A systematic comparison of critical choices for faithful parameter-estimation identifies a combination of a hybrid optimisation algorithm (GLSDC) with data-driven normalisation of simulations (DNS) as the generally best option. Experimental data are often provided in relative, arbitrary units. To match simulations to data, two approaches are common: i) using scaling-factors that have to be estimated (SF); or ii) normalising the simulations in the same way as the data (DNS). Using three test-models of increasing complexity, we explored how this choice affects parameter identifiability and estimation performance. We show that in contrast to SF, DNS does not aggravate non-identifiability and a global-hybrid method combined with DNS outperformed local-multi-start methods. The advantage of DNS in terms of estimation speed was particularly pronounced for the most complex test-problem.