BackgroundDespite increasing interest in applying Natural Language Processing (NLP) to biomedical text, whether this technology can facilitate tasks such as database curation remains unclear.ResultsPaperBrowser is the first NLP-powered interface that was developed under a user-centered approach to improve the way in which FlyBase curators navigate an article. In this paper, we first discuss how observing curators at work informed the design and evaluation of PaperBrowser. Then, we present how we appraise PaperBrowser's navigational functionalities in a user-based study using a text highlighting task and evaluation criteria of Human-Computer Interaction. Our results show that PaperBrowser reduces the amount of interactions between two highlighting events and therefore improves navigational efficiency by about 58% compared to the navigational mechanism that was previously available to the curators. Moreover, PaperBrowser is shown to provide curators with enhanced navigational utility by over 74% irrespective of the different ways in which they highlight text in the article.ConclusionWe show that state-of-the-art performance in certain NLP tasks such as Named Entity Recognition and Anaphora Resolution can be combined with the navigational functionalities of PaperBrowser to support curation quite successfully.
Natural Language Processing in aid of FlyBase curators
Nikiforos Karamanis,Ruth L. Seal,I. Lewin,Peter McQuilton,Andreas Vlachos,C. Gasperin,Rachel A. Drysdale,Ted Briscoe
Published 2008 in BMC Bioinformatics
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2008
- Venue
BMC Bioinformatics
- Publication date
2008-04-14
- Fields of study
Medicine, Computer Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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