Yang Zhao , Danushka Bollegala , Shunsuke Hirose , Yingzi Jin , Tomotake Kozu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective:
As new knowledge is produced at a rapid pace in the biomedical field, existing biomedical Knowledge Graphs (KGs) cannot be manually updated in a timely manner. Previous work in Natural Language Processing (NLP) has leveraged link prediction to infer the missing knowledge in general-purpose KGs. Inspired by this, we propose to apply link prediction to existing biomedical KGs to infer missing knowledge. Although Knowledge Graph Embedding (KGE) methods are effective in link prediction tasks, they are less capable of capturing relations between communities of entities with specific attributes (Fanourakis et al., 2023).
Methods:
To address this challenge, we proposed an entity distance-based method for abstracting a Community Knowledge Graph (CKG) from a simplified version of the pre-existing PubMed Knowledge Graph (PKG) (Xu et al., 2020). For link prediction on the abstracted CKG, we proposed an extension approach for the existing KGE models by linking the information in the PKG to the abstracted CKG. The applicability of this extension was proved by employing six well-known KGE models: TransE, TransH, DistMult, ComplEx, SimplE, and RotatE. Evaluation metrics including Mean Rank (MR), Mean Reciprocal Rank (MRR), and Hits@ were used to assess the link prediction performance. In addition, we presented a backtracking process that traces the results of CKG link prediction back to the PKG scale for further comparison.
Results:
Six different CKGs were abstracted from the PKG by using embeddings of the six KGE methods. The results of link prediction in these abstracted CKGs indicate that our proposed extension can improve the existing KGE methods, achieving a top-10 accuracy of 0.69 compared to 0.5 for TransE, 0.7 compared to 0.54 for TransH, 0.67 compared to 0.6 for DistMult, 0.73 compared to 0.57 for ComplEx, 0.73 compared to 0.63 for SimplE, and 0.85 compared to 0.76 for RotatE on their CKGs, respectively. These improved performances also highlight the wide applicability of the extension approach.
Conclusion:
This study proposed novel insights into abstracting CKGs from the PKG. The extension approach indicated enhanced performance of the existing KGE methods and has applicability. As an interesting future extension, we plan to conduct link prediction for entities that are newly introduced to the PKG.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Biomedical Informatics reflects a commitment to high-quality original research papers, reviews, and commentaries in the area of biomedical informatics methodology. Although we publish articles motivated by applications in the biomedical sciences (for example, clinical medicine, health care, population health, and translational bioinformatics), the journal emphasizes reports of new methodologies and techniques that have general applicability and that form the basis for the evolving science of biomedical informatics. Articles on medical devices; evaluations of implemented systems (including clinical trials of information technologies); or papers that provide insight into a biological process, a specific disease, or treatment options would generally be more suitable for publication in other venues. Papers on applications of signal processing and image analysis are often more suitable for biomedical engineering journals or other informatics journals, although we do publish papers that emphasize the information management and knowledge representation/modeling issues that arise in the storage and use of biological signals and images. System descriptions are welcome if they illustrate and substantiate the underlying methodology that is the principal focus of the report and an effort is made to address the generalizability and/or range of application of that methodology. Note also that, given the international nature of JBI, papers that deal with specific languages other than English, or with country-specific health systems or approaches, are acceptable for JBI only if they offer generalizable lessons that are relevant to the broad JBI readership, regardless of their country, language, culture, or health system.