Abstract

BackgroundThe Simple Knowledge Organization System (SKOS) was introduced to the wider research community by a 2005 World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) working draft, and further developed and refined in a 2009 W3C recommendation. Since then, SKOS has become the de facto standard for representing and sharing thesauri, lexicons, vocabularies, taxonomies, and classification schemes. In this paper, we describe the development of a web-based, free, open-source SKOS editor built for the development, curation, and management of small to medium-sized lexicons for health-related Natural Language Processing (NLP).ResultsThe web-based SKOS editor allows users to create, curate, version, manage, and visualise SKOS resources. We tested the system against five widely-used, publicly-available SKOS vocabularies of various sizes and found that the editor is suitable for the development and management of small to medium-size lexicons. Qualitative testing has focussed on using the editor to develop lexical resources to drive NLP applications in two domains. First, developing a lexicon to support an Electronic Health Record-based NLP system for the automatic identification of pneumonia symptoms. Second, creating a taxonomy of lexical cues associated with Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) diagnoses with the goal of facilitating the automatic identification of symptoms associated with depression from short, informal texts.ConclusionsThe SKOS editor we have developed is — to the best of our knowledge — the first free, open-source, web-based, SKOS editor capable of creating, curating, versioning, managing, and visualising SKOS lexicons.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13326-015-0043-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The Simple Knowledge Organization System (SKOS) standard was introduced to the wider community by a 2005 World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) working draft [1], and further developed and refined in a 2009 W3C recommendation [2, 3]1

  • We describe the development of a web-based, free, opensource SKOS editor suitable for the creation and curation of knowledge organization systems in general, and healthrelated lexicons designed to support clinical Natural Language Processing (NLP) in particular

  • A major requirement for a SKOS editing tool is the ability to visualise and navigate SKOS concept scheme broader/narrower hierarchies, a functionality that is unlikely be supported by generic Web Ontology Language (OWL) and RDF (Resource Description Framework) tools

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Summary

Results

The web-based SKOS editor allows users to create, curate, version, manage, and visualise SKOS resources. We tested the system against five widely-used, publicly-available SKOS vocabularies of various sizes and found that the editor is suitable for the development and management of small to medium-size lexicons. Qualitative testing has focussed on using the editor to develop lexical resources to drive NLP applications in two domains. Developing a lexicon to support an Electronic Health Record-based NLP system for the automatic identification of pneumonia symptoms. Creating a taxonomy of lexical cues associated with Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) diagnoses with the goal of facilitating the automatic identification of symptoms associated with depression from short, informal texts

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