Literature DB >> 11079895

A general method for sifting linguistic knowledge from structured terminologies.

N Grabar1, P Zweigenbaum.   

Abstract

Morphological knowledge is useful for medical language processing, information retrieval and terminology or ontology development. We show how a large volume of morphological associations between words can be learnt from existing medical terminologies by taking advantage of the semantic relations already encoded between terms in these terminologies: synonymy, hierarchy and transversal relations. The method proposed relies on no a priori linguistic knowledge. Since it can work with different relations between terms, it can be applied to any structured terminology. Tested on SNOMED and ICD in French and English, it proves to identify fairly reliable morphological relations (precision > 90%) with a good coverage (over 88% compared to the UMLS lexical variant generation program). For English words with a stem longer than 3 characters, recall reaches 98.8% for inflection and 94.7% for derivation.

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Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 11079895      PMCID: PMC2243874     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc AMIA Symp        ISSN: 1531-605X


  4 in total

1.  Language-independent automatic acquisition of morphological knowledge from synonym pairs.

Authors:  N Grabar; P Zweigenbaum
Journal:  Proc AMIA Symp       Date:  1999

2.  Medical dictionaries for patient encoding systems: a methodology.

Authors:  C Lovis; R Baud; A M Rassinoux; P A Michel; J R Scherrer
Journal:  Artif Intell Med       Date:  1998 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 5.326

3.  Lexical methods for managing variation in biomedical terminologies.

Authors:  A T McCray; S Srinivasan; A C Browne
Journal:  Proc Annu Symp Comput Appl Med Care       Date:  1994

4.  Morphosemantic analysis of -ITIS forms in medical language.

Authors:  M G Pacak; L M Norton; G S Dunham
Journal:  Methods Inf Med       Date:  1980-04       Impact factor: 2.176

  4 in total
  3 in total

1.  Putting data integration into practice: using biomedical terminologies to add structure to existing data sources.

Authors:  Michael N Cantor; Yves A Lussier
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2003

2.  UMLF: a Unified Medical Lexicon for French.

Authors:  Pierre Zweigenbaum; Robert Baud; Anita Burgun; Fiammetta Namer; Eric Jarrousse; Natalia Grabar; Patrick Ruch; Franck Le Duff; Benoît Thirion; Stéfan Darmoni
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2003

3.  Text-mining approach to evaluate terms for ontology development.

Authors:  Lam C Tsoi; Ravi Patel; Wenle Zhao; W Jim Zheng
Journal:  J Biomed Inform       Date:  2009-03-24       Impact factor: 6.317

  3 in total

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