Content area

Abstract

Background

MeSH indexing is the task of assigning relevant MeSH terms based on a manual reading of scholarly publications by human indexers. The task is highly important for improving literature retrieval and many other scientific investigations in biomedical research. Unfortunately, given its manual nature, the process of MeSH indexing is both time-consuming (new articles are not immediately indexed until 2 or 3 months later) and costly (approximately ten dollars per article). In response, automatic indexing by computers has been previously proposed and attempted but remains challenging. In order to advance the state of the art in automatic MeSH indexing, a community-wide shared task called BioASQ was recently organized.

Methods

We propose MeSH Now, an integrated approach that first uses multiple strategies to generate a combined list of candidate MeSH terms for a target article. Through a novel learning-to-rank framework, MeSH Now then ranks the list of candidate terms based on their relevance to the target article. Finally, MeSH Now selects the highest-ranked MeSH terms via a post-processing module.

Results

We assessed MeSH Now on two separate benchmarking datasets using traditional precision, recall and F1-score metrics. In both evaluations, MeSH Now consistently achieved over 0.60 in F-score, ranging from 0.610 to 0.612. Furthermore, additional experiments show that MeSH Now can be optimized by parallel computing in order to process MEDLINE documents on a large scale.

Conclusions

We conclude that MeSH Now is a robust approach with state-of-the-art performance for automatic MeSH indexing and that MeSH Now is capable of processing PubMed scale documents within a reasonable time frame. Availability: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/CBBresearch/Lu/Demo/MeSHNow/.

Details

Title
MeSH Now: automatic MeSH indexing at PubMed scale via learning to rank
Author
Mao, Yuqing; Lu, Zhiyong
Publication year
2017
Publication date
2017
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
e-ISSN
20411480
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1894554330
Copyright
Copyright BioMed Central 2017