Literature DB >> 33894758

Extracting knowledge networks from plant scientific literature: potato tuber flesh color as an exemplary trait.

Gurnoor Singh1, Evangelia A Papoutsoglou1, Frederique Keijts-Lalleman2, Bilyana Vencheva2, Mark Rice2, Richard G F Visser1, Christian W B Bachem1, Richard Finkers3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Scientific literature carries a wealth of information crucial for research, but only a fraction of it is present as structured information in databases and therefore can be analyzed using traditional data analysis tools. Natural language processing (NLP) is often and successfully employed to support humans by distilling relevant information from large corpora of free text and structuring it in a way that lends itself to further computational analyses. For this pilot, we developed a pipeline that uses NLP on biological literature to produce knowledge networks. We focused on the flesh color of potato, a well-studied trait with known associations, and we investigated whether these knowledge networks can assist us in formulating new hypotheses on the underlying biological processes.
RESULTS: We trained an NLP model based on a manually annotated corpus of 34 full-text potato articles, to recognize relevant biological entities and relationships between them in text (genes, proteins, metabolites and traits). This model detected the number of biological entities with a precision of 97.65% and a recall of 88.91% on the training set. We conducted a time series analysis on 4023 PubMed abstract of plant genetics-based articles which focus on 4 major Solanaceous crops (tomato, potato, eggplant and capsicum), to determine that the networks contained both previously known and contemporaneously unknown leads to subsequently discovered biological phenomena relating to flesh color. A novel time-based analysis of these networks indicates a connection between our trait and a candidate gene (zeaxanthin epoxidase) already two years prior to explicit statements of that connection in the literature.
CONCLUSIONS: Our time-based analysis indicates that network-assisted hypothesis generation shows promise for knowledge discovery, data integration and hypothesis generation in scientific research.

Entities:  

Keywords:  IBM Watson; Knowledge networks; NLP; Plant science literature; Relationship extraction; Text mining

Year:  2021        PMID: 33894758     DOI: 10.1186/s12870-021-02943-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Plant Biol        ISSN: 1471-2229            Impact factor:   4.215


  1 in total

1.  Harnessing Biomedical Natural Language Processing Tools to Identify Medicinal Plant Knowledge from Historical Texts.

Authors:  Vivekanand Sharma; Wayne Law; Michael J Balick; Indra Neil Sarkar
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2018-04-16
  1 in total

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