Streamlining social media information retrieval for public health research with deep learning.

IF 4.7 2区 医学 Q1 COMPUTER SCIENCE, INFORMATION SYSTEMS Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association Pub Date : 2024-06-20 DOI:10.1093/jamia/ocae118
Yining Hua, Jiageng Wu, Shixu Lin, Minghui Li, Yujie Zhang, Dinah Foer, Siwen Wang, Peilin Zhou, Jie Yang, Li Zhou
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Abstract

Objective: Social media-based public health research is crucial for epidemic surveillance, but most studies identify relevant corpora with keyword-matching. This study develops a system to streamline the process of curating colloquial medical dictionaries. We demonstrate the pipeline by curating a Unified Medical Language System (UMLS)-colloquial symptom dictionary from COVID-19-related tweets as proof of concept.

Methods: COVID-19-related tweets from February 1, 2020, to April 30, 2022 were used. The pipeline includes three modules: a named entity recognition module to detect symptoms in tweets; an entity normalization module to aggregate detected entities; and a mapping module that iteratively maps entities to Unified Medical Language System concepts. A random 500 entity samples were drawn from the final dictionary for accuracy validation. Additionally, we conducted a symptom frequency distribution analysis to compare our dictionary to a pre-defined lexicon from previous research.

Results: We identified 498 480 unique symptom entity expressions from the tweets. Pre-processing reduces the number to 18 226. The final dictionary contains 38 175 unique expressions of symptoms that can be mapped to 966 UMLS concepts (accuracy = 95%). Symptom distribution analysis found that our dictionary detects more symptoms and is effective at identifying psychiatric disorders like anxiety and depression, often missed by pre-defined lexicons.

Conclusions: This study advances public health research by implementing a novel, systematic pipeline for curating symptom lexicons from social media data. The final lexicon's high accuracy, validated by medical professionals, underscores the potential of this methodology to reliably interpret, and categorize vast amounts of unstructured social media data into actionable medical insights across diverse linguistic and regional landscapes.

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利用深度学习为公共卫生研究简化社交媒体信息提取。
目的:基于社交媒体的公共卫生研究对流行病监测至关重要,但大多数研究都是通过关键词匹配来识别相关语料库。本研究开发了一个系统来简化口语医学词典的整理过程。作为概念验证,我们从 COVID-19 相关推文中整理出 UMLS-口语症状词典,展示了这一管道:方法:我们使用了 2020 年 2 月 1 日至 2022 年 4 月 30 日的 COVID-19 相关推文。该管道包括三个模块:命名实体识别模块,用于检测推文中的症状;实体规范化模块,用于汇总检测到的实体;以及映射模块,用于将实体迭代映射到统一医学语言系统的概念。我们从最终词典中随机抽取了 500 个实体样本进行准确性验证。此外,我们还进行了症状频率分布分析,将我们的词典与之前研究中预先定义的词典进行比较:结果:我们从推文中识别出 498,480 个独特的症状实体表达。预处理后,数量减少到 18,226 条。最终词典包含 38,175 个独特的症状表达,可映射到 966 个 UMLS 概念(准确率 = 95%)。症状分布分析发现,我们的词典能检测出更多症状,并能有效识别焦虑和抑郁等精神疾病,而这些症状往往被预定义词典所遗漏:本研究采用了一种新颖、系统的方法,从社交媒体数据中整理症状词典,从而推动了公共卫生研究。经医学专家验证,最终词典的准确性很高,这凸显了这一方法的潜力,它可以可靠地解释大量非结构化社交媒体数据并将其分类,从而在不同的语言和地区环境中提供可操作的医学见解。
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来源期刊
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association 医学-计算机:跨学科应用
CiteScore
14.50
自引率
7.80%
发文量
230
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: JAMIA is AMIA''s premier peer-reviewed journal for biomedical and health informatics. Covering the full spectrum of activities in the field, JAMIA includes informatics articles in the areas of clinical care, clinical research, translational science, implementation science, imaging, education, consumer health, public health, and policy. JAMIA''s articles describe innovative informatics research and systems that help to advance biomedical science and to promote health. Case reports, perspectives and reviews also help readers stay connected with the most important informatics developments in implementation, policy and education.
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