Gilbert Schönfelder
2025
SMAFIRA Shared Task at the BioNLP’2025 Workshop: Assessing the Similarity of the Research Goal
Mariana Neves
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Iva Sovadinova
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Susanne Fieberg
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Celine Heinl
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Diana Rubel
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Gilbert Schönfelder
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Bettina Bert
Proceedings of the 24th Workshop on Biomedical Language Processing
We organized the SMAFIRA Shared in the scope of the BioNLP’2025 Workshop. Given two articles, our goal was to collect annotations about the similarity of their research goal. The test sets consisted of a list of reference articles and their corresponding top 20 similar articles from PubMed. The task consisted in annotating the similar articles regarding the similarity of their research goal with respect to the one from the corresponding reference article. The assessment of the similarity was based on three labels: "“similar”", "“uncertain”", or "“not similar”". We released two batches of test sets: (a) a first batch of 25 reference articles for five diseases; and (b) a second batch of 80 reference articles for 16 diseases. We collected manual annotations from two teams (RCX and Bf3R) and automatic predictions from two large language models (GPT-4omini and Llama3.3). The preliminary evaluation showed a rather low agreement between the annotators, however, some pairs could potentially be part of a future dataset.
2018
Bf3R at SemEval-2018 Task 7: Evaluating Two Relation Extraction Tools for Finding Semantic Relations in Biomedical Abstracts
Mariana Neves
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Daniel Butzke
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Gilbert Schönfelder
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Barbara Grune
Proceedings of the 12th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation
Automatic extraction of semantic relations from text can support finding relevant information from scientific publications. We describe our participation in Task 7 of SemEval-2018 for which we experimented with two relations extraction tools - jSRE and TEES - for the extraction and classification of six relation types. The results we obtained with TEES were significantly superior than those with jSRE (33.4% vs. 30.09% and 20.3% vs. 16%). Additionally, we utilized the model trained with TEES for extracting semantic relations from biomedical abstracts, for which we present a preliminary evaluation.
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- Mariana Neves 2
- Bettina Bert 1
- Daniel Butzke 1
- Susanne Fieberg 1
- Barbara Grune 1
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