“…Many studies have indicated that computational approaches can timely provide very useful insights for both basic research and drug development, such as predicting drug−target interaction networks , predicting HIV cleavage sites in proteins (Chou, 1996), prediction of body fluids (Hu et al, 2011a), predicting protein metabolic stability (Huang et al 2010), predicting signal peptides (Chou and Shen, 2007), predicting the network of substrate−enzyme−product triads (Chen et al, 2010), predicting protein subcellular locations (Chou et al, 2011), predicting biological functions of compounds based on chemicalchemical interactions (Hu et al, 2011b). Actually, several novel mathematical approaches and physical concepts have been introduced into molecular biology, such as Mahalanobis distance (Chou, 1995), pseudo amino acid composition (Chou, 2001), graph and diagram analysis (Zhou and Deng, 1984;Andraos, 2008;Chou, 2010), cellular automaton (Xiao et al, 2009), grey theory (Xiao et al, 2008), low-frequency (or Terahertz frequency) phonons (Chou, 1989), which can significantly stimulate the development of biological and medical science.…”