Title
A novel framework for biomedical entity sense induction
Date Issued
01 August 2018
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Bian J.
Jonquet C.
Roche M.
Teisseire M.
Universidad de Florida
Publisher(s)
Academic Press Inc.
Abstract
Background: Rapid advancements in biomedical research have accelerated the number of relevant electronic documents published online, ranging from scholarly articles to news, blogs, and user-generated social media content. Nevertheless, the vast amount of this information is poorly organized, making it difficult to navigate. Emerging technologies such as ontologies and knowledge bases (KBs) could help organize and track the information associated with biomedical research developments. A major challenge in the automatic construction of ontologies and KBs is the identification of words with its respective sense(s) from a free-text corpus. Word-sense induction (WSI) is a task to automatically induce the different senses of a target word in the different contexts. In the last two decades, there have been several efforts on WSI. However, few methods are effective in biomedicine and life sciences. Methods: We developed a framework for biomedical entity sense induction using a mixture of natural language processing, supervised, and unsupervised learning methods with promising results. It is composed of three main steps: (1) a polysemy detection method to determine if a biomedical entity has many possible meanings; (2) a clustering quality index-based approach to predict the number of senses for the biomedical entity; and (3) a method to induce the concept(s) (i.e., senses) of the biomedical entity in a given context. Results: To evaluate our framework, we used the well-known MSH WSD polysemic dataset that contains 203 annotated ambiguous biomedical entities, where each entity is linked to 2–5 concepts. Our polysemy detection method obtained an F-measure of 98%. Second, our approach for predicting the number of senses achieved an F-measure of 93%. Finally, we induced the concepts of the biomedical entities based on a clustering algorithm and then extracted the keywords of reach cluster to represent the concept. Conclusions: We have developed a framework for biomedical entity sense induction with promising results. Our study results can benefit a number of downstream applications, for example, help to resolve concept ambiguities when building Semantic Web KBs from biomedical text.
Start page
31
End page
41
Volume
84
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Farmacología, Farmacia
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85049021582
PubMed ID
Source
Journal of Biomedical Informatics
ISSN of the container
15320464
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported in part by the French National Research Agency (ANR) grant ANR-12-JS02-01001 , the University of Montpellier , the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), the FINCyT program, Peru , the National Science Foundation (NSF) award # 1734134 , and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant UL1TR001427 .
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus