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Accuracy Analysis of the End-to-End Extraction of Related Named Entities from Russian Drug Review Texts by Modern Approaches Validated on English Biomedical Corpora.

Authors :
Sboev, Alexander
Rybka, Roman
Selivanov, Anton
Moloshnikov, Ivan
Gryaznov, Artem
Naumov, Alexander
Sboeva, Sanna
Rylkov, Gleb
Zakirova, Soyora
Source :
Mathematics (2227-7390). Jan2023, Vol. 11 Issue 2, p354. 23p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

An extraction of significant information from Internet sources is an important task of pharmacovigilance due to the need for post-clinical drugs monitoring. This research considers the task of end-to-end recognition of pharmaceutically significant named entities and their relations in texts in natural language. The meaning of "end-to-end" is that both of the tasks are performed within a single process on the "raw" text without annotation. The study is based on the current version of the Russian Drug Review Corpus—a dataset of 3800 review texts from the Russian segment of the Internet. Currently, this is the only corpus in the Russian language appropriate for research of the mentioned type. We estimated the accuracy of the recognition of the pharmaceutically significant entities and their relations in two approaches based on neural-network language models. The first core approach is to sequentially solve tasks of named-entities recognition and relation extraction (the sequential approach). The second one solves both tasks simultaneously with a single neural network (the joint approach). The study includes a comparison of both approaches, along with the hyperparameters selection to maximize resulting accuracy. It is shown that both approaches solve the target task at the same level of accuracy: 52–53% macro-averaged F 1 - s c o r e , which is the current level of accuracy for "end-to-end" tasks on the Russian language. Additionally, the paper presents the results for English open datasets ADE and DDI based on the joint approach, and hyperparameter selection for the modern domain-specific language models. The result is that the achieved accuracies of 84.2% (ADE) and 73.3% (DDI) are comparable or better than other published results for the datasets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22277390
Volume :
11
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Mathematics (2227-7390)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161478216
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/math11020354