-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 10
Soft Tagging of Overlapping High Confidence Gene Mention Variants for Cross Species Full Text Gene Normalization.
Citation: Kuo, CJ, Ling, MHT, Hsu, CN. 2011. Soft Tagging of Overlapping High Confidence Gene Mention Variants for Cross-Species Full-Text Gene Normalization. BMC Bioinformatics 12(Suppl 8):S6
Link to [Full Text].
Here is a permanent link to this [PDF] in my own archive.
Background: Previously, gene normalization (GN) systems are mostly focused on disambiguation using contextual information. An effective gene mention tagger is deemed unnecessary because the subsequent steps will filter out false positives and high recall is sufficient. However, unlike similar tasks in the past BioCreative challenges, the BioCreative III GN task is particularly challenging because it is not species-specific. Required to process full-length articles, an ineffective gene mention tagger may produce a huge number of ambiguous false positives that overwhelm subsequent filtering steps while still missing many true positives. Results: We present our GN system participated in the BioCreative III GN task. Our system applies a typical 2-stage approach to GN but features a soft tagging gene mention tagger that generates a set of overlapping gene mention variants with a nearly perfect recall. The overlapping gene mention variants increase the chance of precise match in the dictionary and alleviate the need of disambiguation. Our GN system achieved a precision of 0.9 (F-score 0.63) on the BioCreative III GN test corpus with the silver annotation of 507 articles. Its TAP-k scores are competitive to the best results among all participants. Conclusions: We show that despite the lack of clever disambiguation in our gene normalization system, effective soft tagging of gene mention variants can indeed contribute to performance in cross-species and full-text gene normalization.
Copyright (c) 2008-2024, Maurice HT Ling
Refereed Publications and Technical Reports
Abstracts and Other Un-Refereed Works
Autobiographic Verses (Poems that I wrote) and My Sayings