Abstract

Machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) are becoming more common in infection biology laboratories around the world. Yet, as they gain traction in research, novel frontiers arise. Novel artificial intelligence algorithms are capable of addressing advanced tasks like image generation and question answering. However, similar algorithms can prove useful in addressing advanced questions in infection biology like prediction of host-pathogen interactions or inferring virus protein conformations. Addressing such tasks requires large annotated data sets, which are often scarce in biomedical research. In this review, I bring together several successful examples where such tasks were addressed. I underline the importance of formulating novel AI tasks in infection biology accompanied by freely available benchmark data sets to address these tasks. Furthermore, I discuss the current state of the field and potential future trends. I argue that one such trend involves AI tools becoming more versatile.

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