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Automated recognition of brain region mentions in neuroscience literature

Authors :
Leon French
Suzanne Lane
Lydia Xu
Paul Pavlidis
Source :
Frontiers in Neuroinformatics, Vol 3 (2009)
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2009.

Abstract

The ability to computationally extract mentions of neuroanatomical regions from the literature would assist linking to other entities within and outside of an article. Examples include extracting reports of connectivity or region-specific gene expression. To facilitate text mining of neuroscience literature we have created a corpus of manually annotated brain region mentions. The corpus contains 1,377 abstracts with 18,242 brain region annotations. Interannotator agreement was evaluated for a subset of the documents, and was 90.7% and 96.7% for strict and lenient matching respectively. We observed a large vocabulary of over 6,000 unique brain region terms and 17,000 words. For automatic extraction of brain region mentions we evaluated simple dictionary methods and complex natural language processing techniques. The dictionary methods based on neuroanatomical lexicons recalled 36% of the mentions with 57% precision. The best performance was achieved using a conditional random field (CRF) with a rich feature set. Features were based on morphological, lexical, syntactic and contextual information. The CRF recalled 76% of mentions at 81% precision, by counting partial matches recall and precision increase to 86% and 92% respectively. We suspect a large amount of error is due to coordinating conjunctions, previously unseen words and brain regions of less commonly studied organisms. We found context windows, lemmatization and abbreviation expansion to be the most informative techniques. The corpus is freely available at http://www.chibi.ubc.ca/WhiteText/.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16625196
Volume :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Neuroinformatics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3bdaa00844a74eed964bd3e224e57ae7
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/neuro.11.029.2009