2005
DOI: 10.1093/bioinformatics/bti358
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Improved method for predicting  -turn using support vector machine

Abstract: The SVM method achieved excellent performance as measured by the Matthews correlation coefficient (MCC = 0.45) using a 7-fold cross validation on a database of 426 non-homologous protein chains. To our best knowledge, this MCC value is the highest achieved so far for predicting beta-turn. The overall prediction accuracy Qtotal was 77.3%, which is the best among the existing prediction methods. Among its unique attractive features, the present SVM method avoids overtraining and compresses information and provid… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…On the other hand, type VI were divided into 2 sub-types, that is, VIa [89,117] are nowadays considered as the standard (see Table 1). They are widely analyzed in molecular dynamics [118] and prediction methods have been developed [119][120][121][122][123][124][125][126]. Motifs and conformational analysis of amino acid residues adjoining β-turns in proteins have also been extensively described [127].…”
Section: Secondary Structuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the other hand, type VI were divided into 2 sub-types, that is, VIa [89,117] are nowadays considered as the standard (see Table 1). They are widely analyzed in molecular dynamics [118] and prediction methods have been developed [119][120][121][122][123][124][125][126]. Motifs and conformational analysis of amino acid residues adjoining β-turns in proteins have also been extensively described [127].…”
Section: Secondary Structuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…SVMs have been extensively used in various machine learning problems, especially prediction, as an alternative to standard neural network approaches (Haykin 1999). Their previously successful applications include microarray analysis (Brown et al 2000), disorder prediction in proteins (Ward et al 2004), protein secondary structure prediction (Hua and Sun 2001;Zhang et al 2005), and protein solvent accessibility prediction (Nguyen and Rajapakse 2005), to name a few. The popularity of an SVM is due to its high generalization performance, its intuitive idea, its sound mathematical foundation, and its few numbers of free parameters to adjust.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We employed a support vector machine (SVM) classifier [42] which was previously applied to beta-turn prediction [43,44] and was shown to provide promising results in identifying beta-turn types [20]. Given a training set of data point pairs (x i , c i ), i = 1, 2, … n, where x i denotes the feature vector, c i ={-1, 1} denotes binary class label, n is the number of training data points, finding the optimal SVM is achieved by solving: where w is a vector perpendicular to wx-b=0 hyperplane that separates the two classes, C is a user defined complexity constant, i are slack variables that measure the degree of misclassification of x i for a given hyperplane, b is an offset that defines the size of a margin that separates the two classes, and z= (x) where k(x,x')= (x) (x') is a user defined kernel function.…”
Section: Svm Classifiermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this case, any predicted beta-turn type is considered as a generic beta-turn and the proposed method is compared against several related methods [13,22,23,27,43,44,[52][53][54] based on 7-fold cross validation on dataset 426, see Table 3. We note that several other beta-turn prediction methods, which are not included in our comparison, were also developed [55,56].…”
Section: Quality Of Beta-turn Vs Non-beta-turn Predictionsmentioning
confidence: 99%