Cover image for Mining the biomedical literature
Title:
Mining the biomedical literature
Personal Author:
Series:
Computational molecular biology
Publication Information:
Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, c2012
Physical Description:
xi, 138 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9780262017695
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35000000000892 R118.6 S535 2012 Open Access Book Book
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30000010304336 R118.6 S535 2012 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

A concise introduction to fundamental methods for finding and extracting relevant information from the ever-increasing amounts of biomedical text available

The introduction of high-throughput methods has transformed biology into a data-rich science. Knowledge about biological entities and processes has traditionally been acquired by thousands of scientists through decades of experimentation and analysis. The current abundance of biomedical data is accompanied by the creation and quick dissemination of new information. Much of this information and knowledge, however, is represented only in text form--in the biomedical literature, lab notebooks, Web pages, and other sources. Researchers' need to find relevant information in the vast amounts of text has created a surge of interest in automated text-analysis.

In this book, Hagit Shatkay and Mark Craven offer a concise and accessible introduction to key ideas in biomedical text mining. The chapters cover such topics as the relevant sources of biomedical text; text-analysis methods in natural language processing; the tasks of information extraction, information retrieval, and text categorization; and methods for empirically assessing text-mining systems. Finally, the authors describe several applications that recognize entities in text and link them to other entities and data resources, support the curation of structured databases, and make use of text to enable further prediction and discovery.


Author Notes

Hagit Shatkay is Associate Professor in the Department of Computer and Information Sciences and Head of the Computational Biomedicine Lab at the University of Delaware. Mark Craven is Professor in the Department of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics and in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Wisconsin.


Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsp. ix
1 Introductionp. 1
2 Fundamental Concepts in Biomedical Text Analysisp. 9
3 Information Retrievalp. 33
4 Information Extractionp. 53
5 Evaluationp. 77
6 Putting It All Together: Current Applications and Future Directionsp. 99
Referencesp. 115
Indexp. 131