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LoGo-GR: A Local to Global Graphical Reasoning Framework for Extracting Structured Information From Biomedical Literature.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform ; 28(4): 2314-2325, 2024 Apr.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38265897
ABSTRACT
In the biomedical literature, entities are often distributed within multiple sentences and exhibit complex interactions. As the volume of literature has increased dramatically, it has become impractical to manually extract and maintain biomedical knowledge, which would entail enormous costs. Fortunately, document-level relation extraction can capture associations between entities from complex text, helping researchers efficiently mine structured knowledge from the vast medical literature. However, how to effectively synthesize rich global information from context and accurately capture local dependencies between entities is still a great challenge. In this paper, we propose a Local to Global Graphical Reasoning framework (LoGo-GR) based on a novel Biased Graph Attention mechanism (B-GAT). It learns global context feature and information of local relation path dependencies from mention-level interaction graph and entity-level path graph respectively, and collaborates with global and local reasoning to capture complex interactions between entities from document-level text. In particular, B-GAT integrates structural dependencies into the standard graph attention mechanism (GAT) as attention biases to adaptively guide information aggregation in graphical reasoning. We evaluate our method on three publicly biomedical document-level datasets Drug-Mutation Interaction (DV), Chemical-induced Disease (CDR), and Gene-Disease Association (GDA). LoGo-GR has advanced and stable performance compared to other state-of-the-art methods (it achieves state-of-the-art performance with 96.14%-97.39% F1 on DV dataset, advanced performance with 68.89% F1 and 84.22% F1 on CDR and GDA datasets, respectively). In addition, LoGo-GR also shows advanced performance on general-domain document-level relation extraction dataset, DocRED, which proves that it is an effective and robust document-level relation extraction framework.
Asunto(s)

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Minería de Datos Idioma: En Revista: IEEE J Biomed Health Inform Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Minería de Datos Idioma: En Revista: IEEE J Biomed Health Inform Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article
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