A normalized lexical lookup approach to identifying UMLS concepts in free text.

Stud Health Technol Inform

Medical Imaging Informatics Group, University of California, Los Angeles, United States.

Published: November 2007

The National Library of Medicine has developed a tool to identify medical concepts from the Unified Medical Language System in free text. This tool - MetaMap (and its java version MMTx) has been used extensively for biomedical text mining applications. We have developed a module for MetaMap which has a high performance in terms of processing speed. We evaluated our module independently against MetaMap for the task of identifying UMLS concepts in free text clinical radiology reports. A set of 1000 sentences from neuro-radiology reports were collected and processed using our technique and the MMTx Program. An evaluation showed that our technique was able to identify 91% of the concepts found by MMTx in 14% of the time taken by MMTx. An error analysis showed that the missing concepts were largely those which were not direct lexical matches but inferential matches of multiple concepts. Our method also identified multi-phrase concepts which MMTx failed to identify. We suggest that this module be implemented as an option in MMTx for real-time text mining applications where single concepts found in the UMLS need to be identified.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

free text
12
identifying umls
8
concepts
8
umls concepts
8
concepts free
8
text mining
8
mining applications
8
concepts mmtx
8
mmtx
6
text
5

Similar Publications

The collective experience of moral distress: a qualitative analysis of perspectives of frontline health workers during COVID-19.

Philos Ethics Humanit Med

January 2025

Department of Allergy, Immunology and Respiratory Medicine, Central Clinical School, The Alfred Hospital, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.

Background: Moral distress is reported to be a critical force contributing to intensifying rates of anxiety, depression and burnout experienced by healthcare workers. In this paper, we examine the moral dilemmas and ensuing distress personally and collectively experienced by healthcare workers while caring for patients during the pandemic.

Methods: Data are drawn from free-text responses from a cross-sectional national online survey of Australian healthcare workers about the patient care challenges they faced.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

How can we remove erroneous penicillin allergy labels?

Evid Based Dent

January 2025

Public Health Directorate, NHS Lanarkshire, Kirklands, Fallside Road, Bothwell, G71 8BB, UK.

Objectives: To evaluate the use of the Penicillin Allergy Reassessment for Treatment Improvement (PARTI) tool in supporting appropriate penicillin allergy labelling in dental practices.

Design: Parallel mixed methods study.

Methods: Focus groups of patients with documented penicillin allergies and healthcare worker targeted questionnaires were used in gathering feedback on the PARTI tool's design and functionality.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Among expanding discoveries of quantum phases in moiré superlattices, correlated insulators stand out as both the most stable and most commonly observed. Despite the central importance of these states in moiré physics, little is known about their underlying nature. Here, we use pump-probe spectroscopy to show distinct time-domain signatures of correlated insulators at fillings of one (ν = -1) and two (ν = -2) holes per moiré unit cell in the angle-aligned WSe/WS system.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Objective: Despite significant investments in the normalization and the standardization of Electronic Health Records (EHRs), free text is still the rule rather than the exception in clinical notes. The use of free text has implications in data reuse methods used for supporting clinical research since the query mechanisms used in cohort definition and patient matching are mainly based on structured data and clinical terminologies. This study aims to develop a method for the secondary use of clinical text by: (a) using Natural Language Processing (NLP) for tagging clinical notes with biomedical terminology; and (b) designing an ontology that maps and classifies all the identified tags to various terminologies and allows for running phenotyping queries.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!