Abstract

Gene regulatory networks (GRNs) play crucial roles in various cellular processes, including stress response, DNA repair, and the mechanisms involved in complex diseases such as cancer. Biologists are involved in most biological analyses. Thus, quantifying their policies reflected in available biological data can significantly help us to better understand these complex systems. The primary challenges preventing the utilization of existing machine learning, particularly inverse reinforcement learning techniques, to quantify biologists' knowledge are the limitations and huge amount of uncertainty in biological data. This paper leverages the network-like structure of GRNs to define expert reward functions that contain exponentially fewer parameters than regular reward models. Numerical experiments using mammalian cell cycle and synthetic gene-expression data demonstrate the superior performance of the proposed method in quantifying biologists' policies.

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