Active substances calculation
Depending on the model settings, the set of active substances for a specified effect is computed in several ways:
- From the list of substances with available points of departure (POD) data for the specified effect. If there is a POD, then the substance is considered an active substance with membership 1. If not, the membership is 0, and the substance is excluded from the list of active substances. 
- From one or more in-silico (QSAR and/or molecular docking) models. The results of the in-silico models should be provided as QSAR membership models data and/or molecular docking models data. Binding energies from molecular docking models are first translated to crisp memberships using a threshold value. The results from multiple in-silico models can be combined in any of four membership calculation methods: - (crisp, any) the substance is considered an active substance if any in-silico model indicates activity; 
- (crisp, majority) the substance is considered an active substance if the majority of in-silico models indicates activity; 
- (probabilistic, ratio) the membership probability is the fraction of in-silico models that indicate activity; 
- (probabilistic, Bayesian) the membership probability is calculated using a Bayesian model according to Kennedy et al. (2020) and a specified prior probability (which is by default 0.5). 
 
For substances within the scope of the assessment but without in-silico data, the default is to omit them from the assessment group. Set option Include substances without membership information to include them in the assessment group.
- From a combination of 1 and 2, using either the union (OR) method or the intersection (AND method) of results.