scholarly journals Natural Language Processing for Risk Identification in Business Process Repositories

Author(s):  
Avi Wasser ◽  
Maya Lincoln
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 40-44
Author(s):  
Olivia Fragoso-Diaz ◽  
Vitervo Lopez Caballero ◽  
Juan Carlos Rojas-Perez ◽  
Rene Santaolaya-Salgado ◽  
Juan Gabriel Gonzalez-Serna

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marika Cusick ◽  
Sumithra Velupillai ◽  
Johnny Downs ◽  
Thomas Campion ◽  
Rina Dutta ◽  
...  

Abstract In the global effort to prevent death by suicide, many academic medical institutions are implementing natural language processing (NLP) approaches to detect suicidality from unstructured clinical text in electronic health records (EHRs), with the hope of targeting timely, preventative interventions to individuals most at risk of suicide. Despite the international need, the development of these NLP approaches in EHRs has been largely local and not shared across healthcare systems. In this study, we developed a process to share NLP approaches that were individually developed at King’s College London (KCL), UK and Weill Cornell Medicine (WCM), US - two academic medical centers based in different countries with vastly different healthcare systems. After a successful technical porting of the NLP approaches, our quantitative evaluation determined that independently developed NLP approaches can detect suicidality at another healthcare organization with a different EHR system, clinical documentation processes, and culture, yet do not achieve the same level of success as at the institution where the NLP algorithm was developed (KCL approach: F1-score 0.85 vs. 0.68, WCM approach: F1-score 0.87 vs. 0.72). Shared use of these NLP approaches is a critical step forward towards improving data-driven algorithms for early suicide risk identification and timely prevention.


Author(s):  
Ana Cláudia de Almeida Bordignon ◽  
Lucinéia Heloisa Thom ◽  
Thanner Soares Silva ◽  
Vinicius Stein Dani ◽  
Marcelo Fantinato ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
pp. 3-17
Author(s):  
Peter Nabende

Natural Language Processing for under-resourced languages is now a mainstream research area. However, there are limited studies on Natural Language Processing applications for many indigenous East African languages. As a contribution to covering the current gap of knowledge, this paper focuses on evaluating the application of well-established machine translation methods for one heavily under-resourced indigenous East African language called Lumasaaba. Specifically, we review the most common machine translation methods in the context of Lumasaaba including both rule-based and data-driven methods. Then we apply a state of the art data-driven machine translation method to learn models for automating translation between Lumasaaba and English using a very limited data set of parallel sentences. Automatic evaluation results show that a transformer-based Neural Machine Translation model architecture leads to consistently better BLEU scores than the recurrent neural network-based models. Moreover, the automatically generated translations can be comprehended to a reasonable extent and are usually associated with the source language input.


Diabetes ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 68 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 1243-P
Author(s):  
JIANMIN WU ◽  
FRITHA J. MORRISON ◽  
ZHENXIANG ZHAO ◽  
XUANYAO HE ◽  
MARIA SHUBINA ◽  
...  

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