Abstract
BackgroundA large collection of dialogues between patients and doctors must be annotated for medical named entities to build intelligence for telemedicine. However, since most patients involved in telemedicine deliver related named entities in informal and long multiword expressions, it is challenging to tag their telemedicine dialogue data. This study aims to address this issue.MethodsWith the telemedicine dialogue dataset for obstetrics and gynecology taken from haodf.com, we developed guidelines and followed a two-round procedure to tag six types of named entities, including disease, symptom, time, pharmaceutical, operation, and examination. Additionally, we developed four deep-learning models based on this dataset to establish a benchmark for named-entity recognition (NER).ResultsThe distilled obstetrics and gynecology dataset contains 2,383 consultations between doctors and patients, of which 13,411 sentences were from doctors, and 17,929 were from patients. With 63,560 named entities in total, the average number of characters per named entity is 4.33. The experimental results suggest that LatticeLSTM performs best on our dataset in terms of accuracy, precision, recall, and F score.ConclusionCompared with other datasets, this dataset offers three novel facets. This study offers intricately tagged long multiword expressions for medical named entities. Second, this study is one of the first attempts to mark temporal entities in a medical dataset. Third, this annotated dataset is balanced across the six types of labels, which we believe will play a considerable role in expanding telemedicine artificial intelligence.
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