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Taiyi: A Bilingual Fine-Tuned Large Language Model for Diverse Biomedical Tasks

Authors :
Luo, Ling
Ning, Jinzhong
Zhao, Yingwen
Wang, Zhijun
Ding, Zeyuan
Chen, Peng
Fu, Weiru
Han, Qinyu
Xu, Guangtao
Qiu, Yunzhi
Pan, Dinghao
Li, Jiru
Li, Hao
Feng, Wenduo
Tu, Senbo
Liu, Yuqi
Yang, Zhihao
Wang, Jian
Sun, Yuanyuan
Lin, Hongfei
Source :
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 2024, ocae037
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objective: Most existing fine-tuned biomedical large language models (LLMs) focus on enhancing performance in monolingual biomedical question answering and conversation tasks. To investigate the effectiveness of the fine-tuned LLMs on diverse biomedical NLP tasks in different languages, We present Taiyi, a bilingual fine-tuned LLM for diverse biomedical tasks. Materials and Methods: We first curated a comprehensive collection of 140 existing biomedical text mining datasets (102 English and 38 Chinese datasets) across over 10 task types. Subsequently, a two-stage strategy is proposed for supervised fine-tuning to optimize the model performance across varied tasks. Results: Experimental results on 13 test sets covering named entity recognition, relation extraction, text classification, question answering tasks demonstrate that Taiyi achieves superior performance compared to general LLMs. The case study involving additional biomedical NLP tasks further shows Taiyi's considerable potential for bilingual biomedical multi-tasking. Conclusion: Leveraging rich high-quality biomedical corpora and developing effective fine-tuning strategies can significantly improve the performance of LLMs within the biomedical domain. Taiyi shows the bilingual multi-tasking capability through supervised fine-tuning. However, those tasks such as information extraction that are not generation tasks in nature remain challenging for LLM-based generative approaches, and they still underperform the conventional discriminative approaches of smaller language models.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 2024, ocae037
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2311.11608
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jamia/ocae037