American Chemical Society
Browse
ci200520g_si_003.xls (3.88 MB)

Comparative Studies on Some Metrics for External Validation of QSPR Models

Download (3.88 MB)
dataset
posted on 2012-02-27, 00:00 authored by Kunal Roy, Indrani Mitra, Supratik Kar, Probir Kumar Ojha, Rudra Narayan Das, Humayun Kabir
Quantitative structure–property relationship (QSPR) models used for prediction of property of untested chemicals can be utilized for prioritization plan of synthesis and experimental testing of new compounds. Validation of QSPR models plays a crucial role for judgment of the reliability of predictions of such models. In the QSPR literature, serious attention is now given to external validation for checking reliability of QSPR models, and predictive quality is in the most cases judged based on the quality of predictions of property of a single test set as reflected in one or more external validation metrics. Here, we have shown that a single QSPR model may show a variable degree of prediction quality as reflected in some variants of external validation metrics like Q2F1, Q2F2, Q2F3, CCC, and rm2 (all of which are differently modified forms of predicted variance, which theoretically may attain a maximum value of 1), depending on the test set composition and test set size. Thus, this report questions the appropriateness of the common practice of the “classic” approach of external validation based on a single test set and thereby derives a conclusion about predictive quality of a model on the basis of a particular validation metric. The present work further demonstrates that among the considered external validation metrics, rm2 shows statistically significantly different numerical values from others among which CCC is the most optimistic or less stringent. Furthermore, at a given level of threshold value of acceptance for external validation metrics, rm2 provides the most stringent criterion (especially with Δrm2 at highest tolerated value of 0.2) of external validation, which may be adopted in the case of regulatory decision support processes.

History