Medical entity linking is the task of identifying and standardizing medical
concepts referred to in an unstructured text. Most of the existing methods
adopt a three-step approach of (1) detecting mentions, (2) generating a list of
candidate concepts, and finally (3) picking the best concept among them. In
this paper, we probe into alleviating the problem of overgeneration of
candidate concepts in the candidate generation module, the most under-studied
component of medical entity linking. For this, we present MedType, a fully
modular system that prunes out irrelevant candidate concepts based on the
predicted semantic type of an entity mention. We incorporate MedType into five
off-the-shelf toolkits for medical entity linking and demonstrate that it
consistently improves entity linking performance across several benchmark
datasets. To address the dearth of annotated training data for medical entity
linking, we present WikiMed and PubMedDS, two large-scale medical entity
linking datasets, and demonstrate that pre-training MedType on these datasets
further improves entity linking performance. We make our source code and
datasets publicly available for medical entity linking research.Comment: 35 page