Recent developments in AI have reinvigorated pursuits to advance the (life) sciences using AI techniques, thereby creating a renewed opportunity to bridge different fields and find synergies. Headlines for AI and the life sciences have been dominated by data-driven techniques, for instance, to solve protein folding with next to no expert knowledge. In contrast to this, we argue for the necessity of a formal representation of expert knowledge - either to develop explicit scientific theories or to compensate for the lack of data. Specifically, we argue that the fields of knowledge representation (KR) and systems biology (SysBio) exhibit important overlaps that have been largely ignored so far. This, in turn, means that relevant scientific questions are ready to be answered using the right domain knowledge (SysBio), encoded in the right way (SysBio/KR), and by combining it with modern automated reasoning tools (KR). Hence, the formal representation of domain knowledge is a natural meeting place for SysBio and KR. On the one hand, we argue that such an interdisciplinary approach will advance the field SysBio by exposing it to industrial-grade reasoning tools and thereby allowing novel scientific questions to be tackled. On the other hand, we see ample opportunities to move the state-of-the-art in KR by tailoring KR methods to the field of SysBio, which comes with challenging problem characteristics, e.g. scale, partial knowledge, noise, or sub-symbolic data. We stipulate that this proposed interdisciplinary research is necessary to attain a prominent long-term goal in the health sciences: precision medicine.
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