Abstract

BackgroundShared tasks and community challenges represent key instruments to promote research, collaboration and determine the state of the art of biomedical and chemical text mining technologies. Traditionally, such tasks relied on the comparison of automatically generated results against a so-called Gold Standard dataset of manually labelled textual data, regardless of efficiency and robustness of the underlying implementations. Due to the rapid growth of unstructured data collections, including patent databases and particularly the scientific literature, there is a pressing need to generate, assess and expose robust big data text mining solutions to semantically enrich documents in real time. To address this pressing need, a novel track called “Technical interoperability and performance of annotation servers” was launched under the umbrella of the BioCreative text mining evaluation effort. The aim of this track was to enable the continuous assessment of technical aspects of text annotation web servers, specifically of online biomedical named entity recognition systems of interest for medicinal chemistry applications.ResultsA total of 15 out of 26 registered teams successfully implemented online annotation servers. They returned predictions during a two-month period in predefined formats and were evaluated through the BeCalm evaluation platform, specifically developed for this track. The track encompassed three levels of evaluation, i.e. data format considerations, technical metrics and functional specifications. Participating annotation servers were implemented in seven different programming languages and covered 12 general entity types. The continuous evaluation of server responses accounted for testing periods of low activity and moderate to high activity, encompassing overall 4,092,502 requests from three different document provider settings. The median response time was below 3.74 s, with a median of 10 annotations/document. Most of the servers showed great reliability and stability, being able to process over 100,000 requests in a 5-day period.ConclusionsThe presented track was a novel experimental task that systematically evaluated the technical performance aspects of online entity recognition systems. It raised the interest of a significant number of participants. Future editions of the competition will address the ability to process documents in bulk as well as to annotate full-text documents.

Highlights

  • There is a pressing need to process systematically the rapidly growing amount of unstructured textual data, in the domain of chemistry or pharmacology and by almost all areas of scientific knowledge [1]

  • The annotation server (AS) implemented a Representational State Transfer (REST) Application Programming Interface (API) that listens and responds to the requests made by the BeCalm metaserver, which acted as a central access point to those base services, delivering a harmonised interface to different biomedical NER algorithms

  • A total of 13 teams participated in Technical Interoperability and Performance of annotation Servers (TIPS) competition and developed 15 different ASs

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Summary

Introduction

There is a pressing need to process systematically the rapidly growing amount of unstructured textual data, in the domain of chemistry or pharmacology and by almost all areas of scientific knowledge [1]. Shared tasks and community challenges represent key instruments to promote research, collabora‐ tion and determine the state of the art of biomedical and chemical text mining technologies Such tasks relied on the comparison of automatically generated results against a so-called Gold Standard dataset of manually labelled textual data, regardless of efficiency and robustness of the underlying implementations. Due to the rapid growth of unstructured data collections, including patent databases and the scientific literature, there is a pressing need to generate, assess and expose robust big data text mining solutions to semantically enrich documents in real time To address this pressing need, a novel track called “Technical interoperability and performance of annota‐ tion servers” was launched under the umbrella of the BioCreative text mining evaluation effort. The aim of this track was to enable the continuous assessment of technical aspects of text annotation web servers, of online biomedical named entity recognition systems of interest for medicinal chemistry applications

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