Advancing the State of the Art in Clinical Natural Language Processing through Shared Tasks

Yearbook of Medical Informatics
Michele Filannino, Ozlem Uzuner

Abstract

To review the latest scientific challenges organized in clinical Natural Language Processing (NLP) by highlighting the tasks, the most effective methodologies used, the data, and the sharing strategies. We harvested the literature by using Google Scholar and PubMed Central to retrieve all shared tasks organized since 2015 on clinical NLP problems on English data. We surveyed 17 shared tasks. We grouped the data into four types (synthetic, drug labels, social data, and clinical data) which are correlated with size and sensitivity. We found named entity recognition and classification to be the most common tasks. Most of the methods used to tackle the shared tasks have been data-driven. There is homogeneity in the methods used to tackle the named entity recognition tasks, while more diverse solutions are investigated for relation extraction, multi-class classification, and information retrieval problems. There is a clear trend in using data-driven methods to tackle problems in clinical NLP. The availability of more and varied data from different institutions will undoubtedly lead to bigger advances in the field, for the benefit of healthcare as a whole.

Citations

Oct 5, 2019·Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA·Sam HenryOzlem Uzuner
Aug 22, 2020·Yearbook of Medical Informatics·Udo Hahn, Michel Oleynik

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Software Mentioned

CLPsych
PubMed Central
RankSVM
MIMIC
Google Scholar

Related Concepts

Trending Feeds

COVID-19

Coronaviruses encompass a large family of viruses that cause the common cold as well as more serious diseases, such as the ongoing outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19; formally known as 2019-nCoV). Coronaviruses can spread from animals to humans; symptoms include fever, cough, shortness of breath, and breathing difficulties; in more severe cases, infection can lead to death. This feed covers recent research on COVID-19.

Blastomycosis

Blastomycosis fungal infections spread through inhaling Blastomyces dermatitidis spores. Discover the latest research on blastomycosis fungal infections here.

Nuclear Pore Complex in ALS/FTD

Alterations in nucleocytoplasmic transport, controlled by the nuclear pore complex, may be involved in the pathomechanism underlying multiple neurodegenerative diseases including Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Frontotemporal Dementia. Here is the latest research on the nuclear pore complex in ALS and FTD.

Applications of Molecular Barcoding

The concept of molecular barcoding is that each original DNA or RNA molecule is attached to a unique sequence barcode. Sequence reads having different barcodes represent different original molecules, while sequence reads having the same barcode are results of PCR duplication from one original molecule. Discover the latest research on molecular barcoding here.

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Chronic fatigue syndrome is a disease characterized by unexplained disabling fatigue; the pathology of which is incompletely understood. Discover the latest research on chronic fatigue syndrome here.

Evolution of Pluripotency

Pluripotency refers to the ability of a cell to develop into three primary germ cell layers of the embryo. This feed focuses on the mechanisms that underlie the evolution of pluripotency. Here is the latest research.

Position Effect Variegation

Position Effect Variagation occurs when a gene is inactivated due to its positioning near heterochromatic regions within a chromosome. Discover the latest research on Position Effect Variagation here.

STING Receptor Agonists

Stimulator of IFN genes (STING) are a group of transmembrane proteins that are involved in the induction of type I interferon that is important in the innate immune response. The stimulation of STING has been an active area of research in the treatment of cancer and infectious diseases. Here is the latest research on STING receptor agonists.

Microbicide

Microbicides are products that can be applied to vaginal or rectal mucosal surfaces with the goal of preventing, or at least significantly reducing, the transmission of sexually transmitted infections. Here is the latest research on microbicides.