Spectral rate theory for projected two-state kinetics
Jan-Hendrik Prinz, John D. Chodera, and Frank Noe

TL;DR
This paper introduces a spectral rate theory that accurately estimates two-state kinetics in noisy or poorly observed systems, applicable to simulations and experiments without requiring a dividing surface.
Contribution
It presents a novel spectral rate theory that accounts for observation effects, providing unbiased rate estimates and a model-free reaction coordinate quality measure.
Findings
Robust, unbiased rate estimation for noisy data.
Quantitative measure of reaction coordinate quality (RCQ).
Successful application to single-molecule experimental data.
Abstract
Classical rate theories often fail in cases where the observable(s) or order parameter(s) used are poor reaction coordinates or the observed signal is deteriorated by noise, such that no clear separation between reactants and products is possible. Here, we present a general spectral two-state rate theory for ergodic dynamical systems in thermal equilibrium that explicitly takes into account how the system is observed. The theory allows the systematic estimation errors made by standard rate theories to be understood and quantified. We also elucidate the connection of spectral rate theory with the popular Markov state modeling (MSM) approach for molecular simulation studies. An optimal rate estimator is formulated that gives robust and unbiased results even for poor reaction coordinates and can be applied to both computer simulations and single-molecule experiments. No definition of a…
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