“…The mechanics of the interaction of neoplastic cells with their environment describes tumour kinetics and is critical for the initiation of cancer invasion [95]. In this context, learning mechanistic interaction networks provide data-driven models [44,96] capable of unsupervised learning of cancer growth curves within, i.e., breast cancer cell lines MDA-MB-231 [97] and MDA-MB-435 [98], and between cancer types, i.e., lung [99], breast, and leukaemia [100]. This is achieved through computational mechanisms that learn the temporal evolution of the tumour growth data obtained either from imaging, e.g., in [97,101]; caliper [99]; or microscopy [99,102], along with the underlying distribution of the input space.…”