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Searching COVID-19 Clinical Research Using Graph Queries: Algorithm Development and Validation

Authors :
Invernici, Francesco
Bernasconi, Anna
Ceri, Stefano
Source :
Journal of Medical Internet Research 2024;26:e52655
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objective: This study aims to consider small graphs of concepts and exploit them for expressing graph searches over existing COVID-19-related literature, leveraging the increasing use of graphs to represent and query scientific knowledge and providing a user-friendly search and exploration experience. Methods: We considered the COVID-19 Open Research Dataset corpus and summarized its content by annotating the publications' abstracts using terms selected from the UMLS and the Ontology of Coronavirus Infectious Disease. Then, we built a co-occurrence network that includes all relevant concepts mentioned in the corpus, establishing connections when their mutual information is relevant. A sophisticated graph query engine was built to allow the identification of the best matches of graph queries on the network. It also supports partial matches and suggests potential query completions using shortest paths. Results: We built a large co-occurrence network, consisting of 128,249 entities and 47,198,965 relationships; the GRAPH-SEARCH interface allows users to explore the network by formulating or adapting graph queries; it produces a bibliography of publications, which are globally ranked; and each publication is further associated with the specific parts of the query that it explains, thereby allowing the user to understand each aspect of the matching. Conclusions: Our approach supports the process of query formulation and evidence search upon a large text corpus; it can be reapplied to any scientific domain where documents corpora and curated ontologies are made available.<br />Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Journal of Medical Internet Research 2024;26:e52655
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2310.04094
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2196/52655