scholarly journals Machine Learning and Natural Language Processing in Domain Classification of Scientific Knowledge Objects: A Review

Author(s):  
Samuel Machado ◽  
Jorge Oliveira e Sá

Sentiment Classification is one of the well-known and most popular domain of machine learning and natural language processing. An algorithm is developed to understand the opinion of an entity similar to human beings. This research fining article presents a similar to the mention above. Concept of natural language processing is considered for text representation. Later novel word embedding model is proposed for effective classification of the data. Tf-IDF and Common BoW representation models were considered for representation of text data. Importance of these models are discussed in the respective sections. The proposed is testing using IMDB datasets. 50% training and 50% testing with three random shuffling of the datasets are used for evaluation of the model.


2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e18093-e18093
Author(s):  
Christi French ◽  
Maciek Makowski ◽  
Samantha Terker ◽  
Paul Alexander Clark

e18093 Background: Pulmonary nodule incidental findings challenge providers to balance resource efficiency and high clinical quality. Incidental findings tend to be undertreated with studies reporting appropriate follow-up rates as low as 29%. Ensuring appropriate follow-up on all incidental findings is labor-intensive; requires the clinical reading and classification of radiology reports to identify high-risk lung nodules. We tested the feasibility of automating this process with natural language processing (NLP) and machine learning (ML). Methods: In cooperation with Sarah Cannon Research Institute (SCRI), we conducted a series of data science experiments utilizing NLP and ML computing techniques on 8,879 free-text, narrative CT (computerized tomography) radiology reports. Reports used were dated from Dec 8, 2015 - April 23, 2017, came from SCRI-affiliated Emergency Department, Inpatient, and Outpatient facilities and were a representative, random sample of the patient populations. Reports were divided into a development set for model training and validation, and a test set to evaluate model performance. Two models were developed - a “Nodule Model” was trained to detect the reported presence of a pulmonary nodule and a rules-based “Sizing Model” was developed to extract the size of the nodule in millimeters. Reports were bucketed into three prediction groups: > = 6 mm, < 6 mm, and no size indicated. Nodules were considered positives and placed in a queue for follow-up if the nodule was predicted > = 6 mm, or if the nodule had no size indicated and the radiology report contained the word “mass.” The Fleischner Society Guidelines and clinical review informed these definitions. Results: Precision and recall metrics were calculated for multiple model thresholds. A threshold was selected based on the validation set calculations and a success criterion of 90% queue precision was selected to minimize false positives. On the test dataset, the F1 measure of the entire pipeline (lung nodule classification model and size extraction model) was 72.9%, recall was 60.3%, and queue precision was 90.2%, exceeding success criteria. Conclusions: The experiments demonstrate the feasibility of NLP and ML technology to automate the detection and classification of pulmonary nodule incidental findings in radiology reports. This approach promises to improve healthcare quality by increasing the rate of appropriate lung nodule incidental finding follow-up and treatment without excessive labor or risking overutilization.


2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 227-235 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cíntia Matsuda Toledo ◽  
Andre Cunha ◽  
Carolina Scarton ◽  
Sandra Aluísio

Discourse production is an important aspect in the evaluation of brain-injured individuals. We believe that studies comparing the performance of brain-injured subjects with that of healthy controls must use groups with compatible education. A pioneering application of machine learning methods using Brazilian Portuguese for clinical purposes is described, highlighting education as an important variable in the Brazilian scenario.OBJECTIVE: The aims were to describe how to: (i) develop machine learning classifiers using features generated by natural language processing tools to distinguish descriptions produced by healthy individuals into classes based on their years of education; and (ii) automatically identify the features that best distinguish the groups.METHODS: The approach proposed here extracts linguistic features automatically from the written descriptions with the aid of two Natural Language Processing tools: Coh-Metrix-Port and AIC. It also includes nine task-specific features (three new ones, two extracted manually, besides description time; type of scene described - simple or complex; presentation order - which type of picture was described first; and age). In this study, the descriptions by 144 of the subjects studied in Toledo18 were used, which included 200 healthy Brazilians of both genders.RESULTS AND CONCLUSION:A Support Vector Machine (SVM) with a radial basis function (RBF) kernel is the most recommended approach for the binary classification of our data, classifying three of the four initial classes. CfsSubsetEval (CFS) is a strong candidate to replace manual feature selection methods.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (suppl) ◽  
pp. 49-49
Author(s):  
Christi French ◽  
Dax Kurbegov ◽  
David R. Spigel ◽  
Maciek Makowski ◽  
Samantha Terker ◽  
...  

49 Background: Pulmonary nodule incidental findings challenge providers to balance resource efficiency and high clinical quality. Incidental findings tend to be under evaluated with studies reporting appropriate follow-up rates as low as 29%. The efficient identification of patients with high risk nodules is foundational to ensuring appropriate follow-up and requires the clinical reading and classification of radiology reports. We tested the feasibility of automating this process with natural language processing (NLP) and machine learning (ML). Methods: In cooperation with Sarah Cannon, the Cancer Institute of HCA Healthcare, we conducted a series of experiments on 8,879 free-text, narrative CT radiology reports. A representative sample of health system ED, IP, and OP reports dated from Dec 2015 - April 2017 were divided into a development set for model training and validation, and a test set to evaluate model performance. A “Nodule Model” was trained to detect the reported presence of a pulmonary nodule and a rules-based “Size Model” was developed to extract the size of the nodule in mms. Reports were bucketed into three prediction groups: ≥ 6 mm, <6 mm, and no size indicated. Nodules were placed in a queue for follow-up if the nodule was predicted ≥ 6 mm, or if the nodule had no size indicated and the report contained the word “mass.” The Fleischner Society Guidelines and clinical review informed these definitions. Results: Precision and recall metrics were calculated for multiple model thresholds. A threshold was selected based on the validation set calculations and a success criterion of 90% queue precision was selected to minimize false positives. On the test dataset, the F1 measure of the entire pipeline was 72.9%, recall was 60.3%, and queue precision was 90.2%, exceeding success criteria. Conclusions: The experiments demonstrate the feasibility of technology to automate the detection and classification of pulmonary nodule incidental findings in radiology reports. This approach promises to improve healthcare quality by increasing the rate of appropriate lung nodule incidental finding follow-up and treatment without excessive labor or risking overutilization.


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