Abstract

BackgroundIn biomedical information extraction, event extraction plays a crucial role. Biological events are used to describe the dynamic effects or relationships between biological entities such as proteins and genes. Event extraction is generally divided into trigger detection and argument recognition. The performance of trigger detection directly affects the results of the event extraction. In general, the traditional method is used to address the trigger detection as a classification task, as well as the use of machine learning or rules method, which construct many features to improve the classification results. Moreover, the classification model only recognizes triggers composed of single words, whereas for multiple words, the result is unsatisfactory.ResultsThe corpus of our model is MLEE. If we were to only use the biomedical LSTM and CRF model without other features, the F-score would reach about 78.08%. Comparing entity to part of speech (POS), we find the entity features more conducive to the improvement of performance of detection, with the F-score potentially reaching about 80%. Furthermore, we also experiment on the other three corpora (BioNLP 2009, BioNLP 2011, and BioNLP 2013) to verify the generalization of our model. Hence, F-scores can reach more than 60%, which are better than the comparative experiments.ConclusionsThe trigger recognition method based on the sequence annotation model does not require initial complex feature engineering, and only requires a simple labeling mechanism to complete the training. Therefore, generalization of our model is better compared to other traditional models. Secondly, this method can identify multi-word triggers, thereby improving the F-scores of trigger recognition. Thirdly, details on the entity have a crucial impact on trigger detection. Finally, the combination of character-level word embedding and word-level word embedding provides increasingly effective information for the model; therefore, it is a key to the success of the experiment.

Highlights

  • In biomedical information extraction, event extraction plays a crucial role

  • How are multi-word triggers detected? This paper proposes a “BIO” label mechanism with annotated triggers which consist of a word or a phrase to help solve the issue of trigger detection

  • We deem that the n-gram of FastText considers morphology of the word, which pays more attention to the similarities in word composition

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Summary

Introduction

Event extraction plays a crucial role. Biological events are used to describe the dynamic effects or relationships between biological entities such as proteins and genes. Event extraction is generally divided into trigger detection and argument recognition. The performance of trigger detection directly affects the results of the event extraction. The traditional method is used to address the trigger detection as a classification task, as well as the use of machine learning or rules method, which construct many features to improve the classification results. If we were to only use the biomedical LSTM and CRF model without other features, the F-score would reach about 78.08%. Comparing entity to part of speech (POS), we find the entity features more conducive to the improvement of performance of detection, with the F-score potentially reaching about 80%. Generalization of our model is better compared to other traditional models This method can identify multiword triggers, thereby improving the F-scores of trigger recognition. The trigger detection’s performance will affect the result regarding event extraction

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