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Dataset Card for Mantra GSC
We selected text units from different parallel corpora (Medline abstract titles, drug labels, biomedical patent claims) in English, French, German, Spanish, and Dutch. Three annotators per language independently annotated the biomedical concepts, based on a subset of the Unified Medical Language System and covering a wide range of semantic groups.
Citation Information
@article{10.1093/jamia/ocv037,
author = {Kors, Jan A and Clematide, Simon and Akhondi,
Saber A and van Mulligen, Erik M and Rebholz-Schuhmann, Dietrich},
title = "{A multilingual gold-standard corpus for biomedical concept recognition: the Mantra GSC}",
journal = {Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association},
volume = {22},
number = {5},
pages = {948-956},
year = {2015},
month = {05},
abstract = "{Objective To create a multilingual gold-standard corpus for biomedical concept recognition.Materials
and methods We selected text units from different parallel corpora (Medline abstract titles, drug labels,
biomedical patent claims) in English, French, German, Spanish, and Dutch. Three annotators per language
independently annotated the biomedical concepts, based on a subset of the Unified Medical Language System and
covering a wide range of semantic groups. To reduce the annotation workload, automatically generated
preannotations were provided. Individual annotations were automatically harmonized and then adjudicated, and
cross-language consistency checks were carried out to arrive at the final annotations.Results The number of final
annotations was 5530. Inter-annotator agreement scores indicate good agreement (median F-score 0.79), and are
similar to those between individual annotators and the gold standard. The automatically generated harmonized
annotation set for each language performed equally well as the best annotator for that language.Discussion The use
of automatic preannotations, harmonized annotations, and parallel corpora helped to keep the manual annotation
efforts manageable. The inter-annotator agreement scores provide a reference standard for gauging the performance
of automatic annotation techniques.Conclusion To our knowledge, this is the first gold-standard corpus for
biomedical concept recognition in languages other than English. Other distinguishing features are the wide variety
of semantic groups that are being covered, and the diversity of text genres that were annotated.}",
issn = {1067-5027},
doi = {10.1093/jamia/ocv037},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1093/jamia/ocv037},
eprint = {https://academic.oup.com/jamia/article-pdf/22/5/948/34146393/ocv037.pdf},
}
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