Biomedical word sense disambiguation with ontologies and metadata: automation meets accuracy
Open Access
- 21 January 2009
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in BMC Bioinformatics
- Vol. 10 (1) , 28
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-10-28
Abstract
Ontology term labels can be ambiguous and have multiple senses. While this is no problem for human annotators, it is a challenge to automated methods, which identify ontology terms in text. Classical approaches to word sense disambiguation use co-occurring words or terms. However, most treat ontologies as simple terminologies, without making use of the ontology structure or the semantic similarity between terms. Another useful source of information for disambiguation are metadata. Here, we systematically compare three approaches to word sense disambiguation, which use ontologies and metadata, respectively.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gene mention normalization and interaction extraction with context models and sentence motifsGenome Biology, 2008
- Terminologies for text-mining; an experiment in the lipoprotein metabolism domainBMC Bioinformatics, 2008
- The strength of co-authorship in gene name disambiguationBMC Bioinformatics, 2008
- Defining functional distances over Gene OntologyBMC Bioinformatics, 2008
- Bio-ontologies: current trends and future directionsBriefings in Bioinformatics, 2006
- Word sense disambiguation by selecting the best semantic type based on Journal Descriptor Indexing: Preliminary experimentJournal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 2005
- Resolving abbreviations to their senses in MedlineBioinformatics, 2005
- Word Sense Disambiguation in the Biomedical Domain: An OverviewJournal of Computational Biology, 2005
- A Multi-aspect Comparison Study of Supervised Word Sense DisambiguationJournal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 2004
- Investigating semantic similarity measures across the Gene Ontology: the relationship between sequence and annotationBioinformatics, 2003