Abstract

Two complementary and non-interactive literature sets of articles, when they are considered together, can reveal useful information of scientific interest not apparent in either of the two document sets. Swanson called the existence of such knowledge, undiscovered public knowledge (UDPK). This paper proposes a semantic-based mining model for UDPK. Our method replaces manual ad-hoc pruning with using semantic knowledge from the biomedical ontologies. Using the semantic types and semantic relationships of the biomedical concepts, our prototype system can identify the relevant concepts collected from Medline and generate the novel hypothesis between these concepts. The system successfully replicates Swanson's two famous discoveries: Raynaud disease/fish oils and migraine/magnesium. Compared with previous approaches, our methods generate much fewer but more relevant novel hypotheses, and require much less human intervention in the discovery procedure.

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