Abstract
Scientists have unprecedented access to a wide variety of high-quality datasets. These datasets, which are often independently curated, commonly use unstructured spreadsheets to store their data. Standardized annotations are essential to perform synthesis studies across investigators, but are often not used in practice. Therefore, accurately combining records in spreadsheets from differing studies requires tedious and error-prone human curation. These efforts result in a significant time and cost barrier to synthesis research. We propose an information retrieval inspired algorithm, Synthesize, that merges unstructured data automatically based on both column labels and values. Application of the Synthesize algorithm to cancer and ecological datasets had high accuracy (on the order of 85–100%). We further implement Synthesize in an open source web application, Synthesizer (https://github.com/lisagandy/synthesizer). The software accepts input as spreadsheets in comma separated value (CSV) format, visualizes the merged data, and outputs the results as a new spreadsheet. Synthesizer includes an easy to use graphical user interface, which enables the user to finish combining data and obtain perfect accuracy. Future work will allow detection of units to automatically merge continuous data and application of the algorithm to other data formats, including databases.
Highlights
Scientists have access to an extensive and varied array of high-quality datasets collected by independent laboratories/studies
The final merging of the Synthesize algorithm depends on the threshold cut-off value between each pair of columns
We develop a new NLP algorithm, Synthesize, to merge sample annotations, with an intuitive interface for human-computer interactions to refine merged columns in data
Summary
Scientists have access to an extensive and varied array of high-quality datasets collected by independent laboratories/studies. The availability of data has resulted in synthesis studies. These synthesis studies combine data across independent studies to arrive at new and exciting conclusions. Many of the independent studies are collected into public domain databases so that they are readily accessible to researchers.
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