Back to Search Start Over

Supervised topic models for clinical interpretability

Authors :
Hughes, Michael C.
Elibol, Huseyin Melih
McCoy, Thomas
Perlis, Roy
Doshi-Velez, Finale
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Supervised topic models can help clinical researchers find interpretable cooccurence patterns in count data that are relevant for diagnostics. However, standard formulations of supervised Latent Dirichlet Allocation have two problems. First, when documents have many more words than labels, the influence of the labels will be negligible. Second, due to conditional independence assumptions in the graphical model the impact of supervised labels on the learned topic-word probabilities is often minimal, leading to poor predictions on heldout data. We investigate penalized optimization methods for training sLDA that produce interpretable topic-word parameters and useful heldout predictions, using recognition networks to speed-up inference. We report preliminary results on synthetic data and on predicting successful anti-depressant medication given a patient's diagnostic history.<br />Comment: Accepted poster presentation at NIPS 2016 Workshop on Machine Learning for Health (http://www.nipsml4hc.ws/)

Subjects

Subjects :
Statistics - Machine Learning

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1612.01678
Document Type :
Working Paper