Jurica Seva
Also published as: Jurica Ševa
2020
Named Entities in Medical Case Reports: Corpus and Experiments
Sarah Schulz
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Jurica Ševa
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Samuel Rodriguez
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Malte Ostendorff
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Georg Rehm
Proceedings of the Twelfth Language Resources and Evaluation Conference
We present a new corpus comprising annotations of medical entities in case reports, originating from PubMed Central’s open access library. In the case reports, we annotate cases, conditions, findings, factors and negation modifiers. Moreover, where applicable, we annotate relations between these entities. As such, this is the first corpus of this kind made available to the scientific community in English. It enables the initial investigation of automatic information extraction from case reports through tasks like Named Entity Recognition, Relation Extraction and (sentence/paragraph) relevance detection. Additionally, we present four strong baseline systems for the detection of medical entities made available through the annotated dataset.
2018
Identifying Key Sentences for Precision Oncology Using Semi-Supervised Learning
Jurica Ševa
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Martin Wackerbauer
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Ulf Leser
Proceedings of the BioNLP 2018 workshop
We present a machine learning pipeline that identifies key sentences in abstracts of oncological articles to aid evidence-based medicine. This problem is characterized by the lack of gold standard datasets, data imbalance and thematic differences between available silver standard corpora. Additionally, available training and target data differs with regard to their domain (professional summaries vs. sentences in abstracts). This makes supervised machine learning inapplicable. We propose the use of two semi-supervised machine learning approaches: To mitigate difficulties arising from heterogeneous data sources, overcome data imbalance and create reliable training data we propose using transductive learning from positive and unlabelled data (PU Learning). For obtaining a realistic classification model, we propose the use of abstracts summarised in relevant sentences as unlabelled examples through Self-Training. The best model achieves 84% accuracy and 0.84 F1 score on our dataset
2016
USFD at SemEval-2016 Task 1: Putting different State-of-the-Arts into a Box
Ahmet Aker
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Frederic Blain
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Andres Duque
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Marina Fomicheva
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Jurica Seva
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Kashif Shah
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Daniel Beck
Proceedings of the 10th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval-2016)
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Co-authors
- Ahmet Aker 1
- Frédéric Blain 1
- Andres Duque 1
- Marina Fomicheva 1
- Kashif Shah 1
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