18,240 research outputs found

    An evaluation of the performance of three semantic background knowledge sources in comparative anatomy

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    In this paper we evaluate the performance and usefulness of three semantic background knowledge sources for predicting synonymous anatomical terms across species boundaries. The reference sources under evaluation are UMLS, FMA-OBO and WordNet, which are applied to the anatomical ontologies of mouse and zebrafish. Our results show that the use of specialized knowledge sources leads to highly accurate predictions, verified through complete manual curation, which can be further improved by combining multiple of said sources. We argue that these three references complement each other in terms of granularity and specificity. From our results we conclude that these references can be used to create reliable ontology mappings with minimal human supervision

    Biomedical ontology alignment: An approach based on representation learning

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    While representation learning techniques have shown great promise in application to a number of different NLP tasks, they have had little impact on the problem of ontology matching. Unlike past work that has focused on feature engineering, we present a novel representation learning approach that is tailored to the ontology matching task. Our approach is based on embedding ontological terms in a high-dimensional Euclidean space. This embedding is derived on the basis of a novel phrase retrofitting strategy through which semantic similarity information becomes inscribed onto fields of pre-trained word vectors. The resulting framework also incorporates a novel outlier detection mechanism based on a denoising autoencoder that is shown to improve performance. An ontology matching system derived using the proposed framework achieved an F-score of 94% on an alignment scenario involving the Adult Mouse Anatomical Dictionary and the Foundational Model of Anatomy ontology (FMA) as targets. This compares favorably with the best performing systems on the Ontology Alignment Evaluation Initiative anatomy challenge. We performed additional experiments on aligning FMA to NCI Thesaurus and to SNOMED CT based on a reference alignment extracted from the UMLS Metathesaurus. Our system obtained overall F-scores of 93.2% and 89.2% for these experiments, thus achieving state-of-the-art results

    Forecasting the Spreading of Technologies in Research Communities

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    Technologies such as algorithms, applications and formats are an important part of the knowledge produced and reused in the research process. Typically, a technology is expected to originate in the context of a research area and then spread and contribute to several other fields. For example, Semantic Web technologies have been successfully adopted by a variety of fields, e.g., Information Retrieval, Human Computer Interaction, Biology, and many others. Unfortunately, the spreading of technologies across research areas may be a slow and inefficient process, since it is easy for researchers to be unaware of potentially relevant solutions produced by other research communities. In this paper, we hypothesise that it is possible to learn typical technology propagation patterns from historical data and to exploit this knowledge i) to anticipate where a technology may be adopted next and ii) to alert relevant stakeholders about emerging and relevant technologies in other fields. To do so, we propose the Technology-Topic Framework, a novel approach which uses a semantically enhanced technology-topic model to forecast the propagation of technologies to research areas. A formal evaluation of the approach on a set of technologies in the Semantic Web and Artificial Intelligence areas has produced excellent results, confirming the validity of our solution

    Matching Biomedical Knowledge Graphs with Neural Embeddings

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    Tese de mestrado, Ciência de Dados, Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Ciências, 2020Os grafos de conhecimento são estruturas que se tornaram fundamentais para a organização dos dados biomédicos que têm sido produzidos a um ritmo exponencial nos últimos anos. A abrangente adoção desta forma de estruturar e descrever dados levou ao desenvolvimento de abordagens de prospeção de dados que tirassem partido desta informação com o intuito de auxiliar o progresso do conhecimento científico. Porém, devido à impossibilidade de isolamento de domínios de conhecimento e à idiossincrasia humana, grafos de conhecimento construídos por diferentes indivíduos contêm muitas vezes conceitos equivalentes descritos de forma diferente, dificultando uma análise integrada de dados de diferentes grafos de conhecimento. Vários sistemas de alinhamento de grafos de conhecimento têm focado a resolução deste desafio. Contudo, o desempenho destes sistemas no alinhamento de grafos de conhecimento biomédicos estagnou nos últimos quatro anos com algoritmos e recursos externos bastante trabalhados para aprimorar os resultados. Nesta dissertação, apresentamos duas novas abordagens de alinhamento de grafos de conhecimento empregando Neural Embeddings: uma utilizando semelhança simples entre embeddings à base de palavras e de entidades de grafos; outra treinando um modelo mais complexo que refinasse a informação proveniente de embeddings baseados em palavras. A metodologia proposta visa integrar estas abordagens no processo regular de alinhamento, utilizando como infraestrutura o sistema AgreementMakerLight. Estas novas componentes permitem extender os algoritmos de alinhamento do sistema, descobrindo novos mapeamentos, e criar uma abordagem de alinhamento mais generalizável e menos dependente de ontologias biomédicas externas. Esta nova metodologia foi avaliada em três casos de teste de alinhamento de ontologias biomédicas, provenientes da Ontology Alignment Evaluation Initiative. Os resultados demonstraram que apesar de ambas as abordagens não excederem o estado da arte, estas obtiveram um desempenho benéfico nas tarefas de alinhamento, superando a performance de todos os sistemas que não usam ontologias externas e inclusive alguns que tiram proveito das mesmas, o que demonstra o valor das técnicas de Neural Embeddings na tarefa de alinhamento de grafos do conhecimento biomédicos.Knowledge graphs are data structures which became essential to organize biomedical data produced at an exponential rate in the last few years. The broad adoption of this method of structuring and describing data resulted in the increased interest to develop data mining approaches which took advantage of these information structures in order to improve scientific knowledge. However, due to human idiosyncrasy and also the impossibility to isolate knowledge domains in separate pieces, knowledge graphs constructed by different individuals often contain equivalent concepts described differently. This obstructs the path to an integrated analysis of data described by multiple knowledge graphs. Multiple knowledge graph matching systems have been developed to address this challenge. Nevertheless, the performance of these systems has stagnated in the last four years, despite the fact that they were provided with highly tailored algorithms and external resources to tackle this task. In this dissertation, we present two novel knowledge graph matching approaches employing neural embeddings: one using plain embedding similarity based on word and graph models; the other one using a more complex word-based model which requires training data to refine embeddings. The proposed methodology aims to integrate these approaches in the regular matching process, using the AgreementMakerLight system as a foundation. These new components enable the extension of the system’s current matching algorithms, discovering new mappings, and developing a more generalizable and less dependent on external biomedical ontologies matching procedure. This new methodology was evaluated on three biomedical ontology matching test cases provided by the Ontology Alignment Evaluation Initiative. The results showed that despite both embedding approaches don’t exceed state of the art results, they still produce better results than any other matching systems which do not make use of external ontologies and also surpass some that do benefit from them. This shows that Neural Embeddings are a valuable technique to tackle the challenge of biomedical knowledge graph matching

    Cortex, countercurrent context, and dimensional integration of lifetime memory

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    The correlation between relative neocortex size and longevity in mammals encourages a search for a cortical function specifically related to the life-span. A candidate in the domain of permanent and cumulative memory storage is proposed and explored in relation to basic aspects of cortical organization. The pattern of cortico-cortical connectivity between functionally specialized areas and the laminar organization of that connectivity converges on a globally coherent representational space in which contextual embedding of information emerges as an obligatory feature of cortical function. This brings a powerful mode of inductive knowledge within reach of mammalian adaptations, a mode which combines item specificity with classificatory generality. Its neural implementation is proposed to depend on an obligatory interaction between the oppositely directed feedforward and feedback currents of cortical activity, in countercurrent fashion. Direct interaction of the two streams along their cortex-wide local interface supports a scheme of "contextual capture" for information storage responsible for the lifelong cumulative growth of a uniquely cortical form of memory termed "personal history." This approach to cortical function helps elucidate key features of cortical organization as well as cognitive aspects of mammalian life history strategies
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