Chemistry Nobel Awarded for an AI System Chem That Predicts Protein Structures
The Nobel prize for Chemistry has been awarded this year for work on the computational design and structural prediction of protein molecules. Half of the prize goes to David Baker of the University of Washington and half jointly to Demis Hassabis and John M. Jumper of the artificial intelligence (AI) company Google DeepMind, based in London.
With the 2024 physics Nobel Prize given to researchers for their foundational work on the neural networks used by today’s AI systems, the chemistry prize further emphasizes the transformative effect such machine learning algorithms are having in many fields. The chemistry award “recognizes how AI is supercharging science,” says Frances Arnold of the California Institute of Technology, a chemistry Nobel laureate for her work on creating non-natural enzymes with new functions.