An Easily Implemented Method for Abbreviation Expansion for the Medical Domain in Japanese Text
書誌事項
- タイトル別名
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- A Preliminary Study
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説明
<jats:title>Summary</jats:title><jats:p>Background: One of the barriers for the effective use of computerized health-care related text is the ambiguity of abbreviations. To date, the task of disambiguating abbreviations has been treated as a classification task based on surrounding words. Application of this framework for languages that have no word boundaries requires pre-processing to segment a sentence into separate word sequences. While the segmentation processing is often a source of problem, it is unknown whether word information is really requisite for abbreviation expansion.</jats:p><jats:p>Objectives: The present study examined and compared abbreviation expansion methods with and without the incorporation of word information as a preliminary study.</jats:p><jats:p>Methods: We implemented two abbreviation expansion methods: 1) a morpheme-based method that relied on word information and therefore required pre-processing, and 2) a character-based method that relied on simple character information. We compared the expansion accuracies for these two methods using eight medical abbreviations. Experimental data were automatically built as a pseudo-annotated corpus using the Internet.</jats:p><jats:p>Results: As a result of the experiment, accuracies for the character-based method were from 0.890 to 0.942 while accuracies for the morpheme-based method were from 0.796 to 0.932. The character-based method significantly outperformed the morpheme-based method for three of the eight abbreviations (p < 0.05). For the remaining five abbreviations, no significant differences were found between the two methods.</jats:p><jats:p>Conclusions: Character information may be a good alternative in terms of simplicity to morphological information for abbreviation expansion in English medical abbreviations appeared in Japanese texts on the Internet.</jats:p>
収録刊行物
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- Methods of Information in Medicine
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Methods of Information in Medicine 52 (01), 51-61, 2013
Georg Thieme Verlag KG