- Research
- Open access
- Published:
Family history information extraction via deep joint learning
BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making volume 19, Article number: 277 (2019)
Abstract
Background
Family history (FH) information, including family members, side of family of family members (i.e., maternal or paternal), living status of family members, observations (diseases) of family members, etc., is very important in the decision-making process of disorder diagnosis and treatment. However FH information cannot be used directly by computers as it is always embedded in unstructured text in electronic health records (EHRs). In order to extract FH information form clinical text, there is a need of natural language processing (NLP). In the BioCreative/OHNLP2018 challenge, there is a task regarding FH extraction (i.e., task1), including two subtasks: (1) entity identification, identifying family members and their observations (diseases) mentioned in clinical text; (2) family history extraction, extracting side of family of family members, living status of family members, and observations of family members. For this task, we propose a system based on deep joint learning methods to extract FH information. Our system achieves the highest F1- scores of 0.8901 on subtask1 and 0.6359 on subtask2, respectively.
Background
FH information that records health status of family members such as side of family, living status and observations is very important for disorder diagnosis and treatment decision-making and is always embedded in clinical text. Extracting FH information from clinical text is the first step to use this information. The goal of FH information extraction, as mentioned in the BioCreative/OHNLP2018 challenge [1], is to recognize relative entities and their attributes, and determine relations between relative entities and their attributes.
FH Information Extraction refers to two fundamental tasks of natural language processing (NLP), namely named entity recognition and relation extraction. Relation extraction is usually treated as a subsequent task of named entity recognition, and they are tackled by pipeline methods. A large number of machine learning methods have been proposed for each one of the two tasks from traditional machine learning methods depending on manually-crafted features to deep learning methods without needing complex feature engineering. For named entity recognition, traditional machine learning methods, such as support vector machine (SVM), hidden Markov model (HMM), structured support vector machine (SSVM) and conditional random field (CRF), and deep learning methods, such as Long Short Term Memory networks (LSTM) [2] and LSTM-CRF [3], are deployed. For relation recognition, traditional machine learning methods, such as maximum entropy (ME), decision trees (DT) and SVM, and deep learning methods, such as convolution neural network (CNN) [4] and recurrent neural network (RNN) [5], are employed. These methods achieve promising results for each task.
In the clinical domain, the related techniques develop rapidly due to several shared tasks, such as the NLP challenges organized by the Center for Informatics for Integrating Biology & the Beside (i2b2) in 2009 [6], 2010 [7], 2012 [8] and 2014 [9], the NLP challenges organized by SemEval in 2014 [10], 2015 [11] and 2016 [12], and the NLP challenges organized by ShARe/CLEF in 2013 [13] and 2014 [14]. Machine learning methods mentioned above have been adopted for clinical entity recognition and relation extraction.
When named entity recognition and relation extraction are tackled separately in pipeline methods, it is impossible to avoid propagating errors in named entity recognition to relation extraction without any feedback, which is called error propagation [15]. To avoid error propagation, a few number of joint learning methods have been proposed. Early joint learning methods combine the models for the two subtaks through various constraints such as integer linear progamming [16, 17]. Recently, deep learning methods have been introduced to tackle joint learning tasks by sharing parameters in a unified neural network framework, such as [15, 18].
In this paper, we propose a deep joint learning method for the FH information extraction task (i.e., task 1) of the BioCreative/OHNLP2018 challenge (called BioCreative/OHNLP2018-FH). The method is derived from Miwa et al.’s method [18] by replacing the tree-structured LSTM by a common LSTM for relation extraction and adding a combination coefficient to adjust two subtasks. Experiments results show that our proposed system achieve an F1- score of 0.8901 on entity identification and an F1-score of 0.6359 on family history extraction, respectively.
Materials and methods
The proposed deep joint learning method is mainly composed of two parts (as shown in Fig. 1, where ‘B-LS’ denotes ‘B-LivingStutas’, and ‘B-FM’ denotes ‘B-FamilyMember’.): 1) Entity recognition, which consists of three layers: input layer, Bi-LSTM layer and softmax layer. The input layer gets the word embeddings and part-of-speech (POS) embeddings of words in a sentence by dictionary-lookup, the Bi-LSTM (Bidirectional LSTM) layer produces sentence representation, that is a sequence of hidden states, and the softmax layer predicts a sequence of labels, each one of which corresponds to a word at the same position. 2) Relation extraction, which also contains three layers. Firstly, the input layer gets word and label embeddings of words. Then, the Bi-LSTM layer represents an entity pair (i.e., a relation candidate) using context between the two entities of the pair and the two entities themselves. Finally, the softmax layer determines whether there is a relation between the two entities of the given entity pair.
Dataset
In the OHNLP2018-FH [1] challenge, three types of FH information embedded in Patient Provide Information (PPI) questionnaires need to be recognized, that is, “FamilyMember” (denoted by FM), “Observation” and “LivingStatus” (denoted by LS), and which FM observations and LSs modify needs to be identified. FMs, including Father, Mother, Sister, Parent, Brother, Grandmother, Grandfather, Grandparent, Daughter, Son, Child, Cousin, Sibling, Aunt and Uncle, fall into three categories: Maternal, Paternal and NA (means unclear), called “side of family”. LSs that show health status of FMs have two attributes: “Alive” and “Healthy”, each of which is measured by a real-valued score and the total LS score is the alive score times the healthy score. The OHNLP2018-FH challenge organizers provide 149 records manually annotated with family history information, among which 99 records are used as a training set and 50 records as a test set.
Entity recognition
We adopt “BIO” to represent the boundaries of each entity, where ‘B’, ‘I’ and ‘O’ denote a token is at the beginning of an entity, inside an entity and outside of an entity, respectively. In this study, we compare two strategies for FH information recognition at different type levels: three types – {FM, Observation, LS} and five types – {Maternal, Paternal, NA, Observation, LS}, where FMs’ side of family is directly determined.
Input layer
Each token wi in a sentence w1w2...wn is represented by xi including word embeddings and corresponding POS embeddings.
Bi-LSTM layer
Taking x1x2...xn as input, the Bi-LSTM layer outputs the sentence representation h1h2...hn, where hi = [hfi, hbi] is the concatenation of the outputs of forward and backward LSTMs at time t. Take the forward LSTM as an example, hft (instead by ht in the equation for convenience) is obtained in the following way:
where σ denotes the element-wise sigmoid function, it is an input gate, ft is a forget gate, ot is an output gate, ct is a memory cell, ht is a hidden state, bg is a bias, Wg is a weight matrix (g ∈ {i, f, c}).
Softmax layer
The softmax layer takes the label embeddings at the previous time (denoted by lt-1) and the output of Bi-LSTM at current time (i.e., ht) as input and predicts the label of the current word yt as follows:
where W and b are weight matrices and bias vectors, respectively.
Relation extraction
After FMs, observations and LSs are recognized, the deep joint learning method takes each pair of an FM and an observation or an FM and an LS as a candidate. Given a candidate (e1, e2), the corresponding sentence is split into five parts: the three contexts before, between and after the two entities, and the two entities themselves. We take advantages of the two entities and the context between them for relation extraction. Each entity ei (i = 1, 2) is represented as \( {h}_{e_i}={\sum}_{w_t\in {e}_i}\left(\left[{h}_t,{l}_t\right]\right) \), and the context between the two entities is represented by Bi-LSTM, which takes the sequence of ht as input and outputs a sequence of hidden states. In our study, the last two hidden states are concatenated together to represent the context between the two entities, denoted as hcontext. Finally, \( {h}_r=\left[{h}_{e_1},{h}_{context},{h}_{e_2}\right] \) is fed into a softmax layer for classification.
Joint learning of entity recognition and relation extraction
We use cross-entropy as loss function, Le and Lr to denote the loss of entity recognition and relation extraction respectively. The joint loss of the two subtasks is:
where α is the combination coefficient. If α is larger, the influence of entity recognition is greater, otherwise, the influence of relation extraction is greater.
Rule-based post processing
We design a rule-based post processing module to make a conversion to the results of entity recognition and relation extraction for evaluation. The post processing module defines specific rules for different cases as follows:
(I) In the case of entity recognition, when using the strategy of three types, FMs’ side of family is determined by the rules below:
- (1)
If an FM is a first-degree relative, then its side of family is “NA”.
- (2)
If an family member belongs to section “maternal family history:” or “paternal family history:”, then its side of family is maternal or paternal.
- (3)
If there is an indicator (“maternal” or “paternal”) near an family member, then its side of family is determined by the indicator.
- (4)
Otherwise, the side of family of an family member is “NA”.
(II) To determine the LS of an FM is “Alive” or “Healthy”, we just check whether the recognized LS contains keywords “alive” or “healthy”. The total LS score of an FM is further determined according to the following rules listed in Table 1, where ‘*’ denotes arbitrary value.
Results
In this study, the pipeline method that uses the same algorithms as the deep joint learning method for entity recognition and relation extraction separately is used as a baseline. Furthermore, we also investigate the effect of the combination coefficient α.
Experimental settings
We randomly selected 10 records from the training set for model validation when participating the challenge. In this version, we fix some bugs and further update the last model for the challenge on all training set for 5 epoches more. The hyperparameters used in our experiments are listed in Table 2. All embeddings are randomly initialized except the word embeddings, which are initialized by GloVe (https://nlp.stanford.edu/projects/glove). We use NLTK (https://www.nltk.org) for POS tagging.
Evaluation
The performance of all models on both two subtasks of the OHNLP2018-FH challenge is measured by precision (P), recall (R) and F1-score (F1), which are defined as:
where TP, FP and FN denote the number of true positive samples, the number of false positive samples and the number of false negative samples, respectively. We use the tool provided by the organizers (https://github.com/ohnlp/fh_eval) to calculate them.
Experimental results
As shown in Table 3 (all highest values are higligted in bold), the deep joint learning method achieves higher F1-scores than the pipeline method on FM information recognition because of higher precisions and relation extraction because of higher precisions and recalls. The method, no matter pipeline or joint, when considering three types of FM information performs better than the same method considering five types of FM information on FM informaiton recognition, but worse on relation extraction. The joint method considering three types of FM information achives the highest F1-score of 0.8901 on FM information recognition, higher than the pipeline method considering three types of FM information by 0.76% and the joint method considering five types of FM information by 0.69%. The joint method considering five types of FM information achives the highest F1-score of 0.6359 on relation extraction, higher than the pipeline method considering five types of FM information by 2.5% and the joint learning method considering three types of FM information by 6.31%. It should be noted that the last model for the challenge ranked first on FM information recognition, and the new version achieves higher F1-scores than the best F1-scores reported in the challenge on both FM information recognition and relation extraction.
The effect of the combination coefficient (α) on the deep joint learning method is shown in Table 4. The deep joint learning method achieves the highest F1-score on FM information recognition when α = 0.4, and on relation extraction when α = 0.6.
Discussion
In this paper, we propose a deep joint learning method for the family history extraction task of the BioCreative/OHNLP2018 challenge. The deep joint learning method achieves the best F1-score of the BioCreative/OHNLP2018-FH challenge.
It is easy to understand that the deep joint learning method outperforms the corresponding pipeline method as joint method has ability to make the two subtasks consistent to avoid error propagation existing in pipeline method. For example, in sentence “Leah’s father’s father, a 72-year-old gentleman, has a pacemaker for Chronic lymphocytic leukemia of very late adult onset.”, there is a family member “father’s father” with an observation “Chronic lymphocytic leukemia”, which are correctly recognized by the joint learning method. However, the pipeline method wrongly recognizes “adult onset” as an observation and leads to a wrong relation between “father’s father” and “adult onset”,
Although the proposed deep joint learning method shows promising performance, there also are some errors. To analyze error distribution, we look into the performance of the deep learning method on each type of FM information and relation, shown in Table 5. We find that a large number of errors are caused by indirect relatives. For example, in sentence “She reports that her paternal grandmother has seven sisters who also had kidney cancer at unknown ages.”, “sisters” are wrongly recognized as the patient’s family members with an observation of “kidney cancer”, although “sisiters” are sisiters of the patient’s paternal grandmother, not the patient. A possible way to solve this problem is to consider relations among relatives in detail.
For further improvement, there may be two directions: 1) developing more better joint deep learning methods such as using Bi-LSTM-CRF for FM information named entity recognition and; 2) Introducing attention mechanism for relation extraction; 2) considering relations among all relatives of patient.
Conclusion
The proposed deep joint learning method achieves the best F1-score of the BioCreative/OHNLP2018 challenge on FH information extraction up to date, and outperforms the corresponding pipeline method. Two possible directions for further improvement includes developing more better joint learning methods and considering relations among all relatives of patient.
Availability of data and materials
Our annotated corpus was supplied by BioCreative/OHNLP oraganization on family history extraction task.
Abbreviations
- CNN:
-
Convolution neural network
- CRF:
-
Conditional random field
- DT:
-
Decision trees
- EHRS:
-
Electronic health records
- F1:
-
F1-score
- FH:
-
Family history
- FM:
-
FamilyMember
- FN:
-
False negative
- FP:
-
False positive
- HMM:
-
Hidden Markov model
- LS:
-
LivingStutas
- LSTM:
-
Long Short Term Memory networks
- ME:
-
Maximum entropy
- NLP:
-
Natural language processing
- P:
-
Precision
- POS:
-
Part-of-speech
- PPI:
-
Patient Provide Information
- R:
-
Recall
- RNN:
-
Recurrent neural network
- SSVM:
-
Structured support vector machine
- SVM:
-
Support vector machine
- TP:
-
True positive
References
Sijia Liu, Majid Rastegar Mojarad, Yanshan Wang, Liwei Wang, Feichen Shen, Sunyang Fu, Hongfang Liu, Overview of the BioCreative/OHNLP 2018 Family History Extraction Task, BioCreative 2018 Proceedings.
Hochreiter S, Schmidhuber J. LSTM can solve hard long time lag problems[C]//Advances in neural information processing systems. 1997: 473-479.
Huang Z, Xu W, Yu K, et al. Bidirectional LSTM-CRF Models for Sequence Tagging. arXiv: 1508.01991, Computation and Language, 2015.
Sahu S K, Anand A, Oruganty K, et al. Relation extraction from clinical texts using domain invariant convolutional neural network[C]//Proceedings of the 15th Workshop on Biomedical Natural Language Processing, 2016:206-215.
Luo Y. Recurrent neural networks for classifying relations in clinical notes[J]. Journal of biomedical informatics, 2017, 72:85-95.
Uzuner Ö, Solti I, Cadag E. Extracting medication information from clinical text. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2010;17:514–8.
Tang B, Cao H, Wu Y, Jiang M, Xu H. Recognizing clinical entities in hospital discharge summaries using Structural Support Vector Machines with word representation features. BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2013;13:1.
Tang B, Wu Y, Jiang M, et al. A hybrid system for temporal information extraction from clinical text[J]. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 2013, 20(5):828-835.
Liu Z, Chen Y, Tang B, Wang X, Chen Q, Li H, Wang J, Deng Q, Zhu S. Automatic de-identification of electronic medical records using token-level and character-level conditional random fields. J Biomed Inform. 2015;58:S47–52.
Pradhan S, Elhadad N, Chapman W, et al. Semeval-2014 task 7: Analysis of clinical text[C]//Proceedings of the 8th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval 2014). 2014:54-62.
Bethard S, Derczynski L, Savova G, et al. Semeval-2015 task 6: Clinical tempeval[C]//Proceedings of the 9th international workshop on semantic evaluation (SemEval 2015). 2015: 806-814.
Kelly L, Goeuriot L, Suominen H, et al. Overview of the CLEF eHealth Evaluation Lab 2016[C]//International Conference of the Cross-Language Evaluation Forum for European Languages. Springer, Cham, 2016: 255-266.
Suominen H, Salantera S, Velupillai S, et al. Overview of the ShARe/CLEF eHealth Evaluation Lab 2013[C]. Cross Language Evaluation Forum, 2013: 212-231.
Goeuriot L, Kelly L, Li W, et al. ShARe/clef ehealth evaluation lab 2014, task 3: User-centred health information retrieval[C]. Cross Language Evaluation Forum, 2014:43-61.
Q. Li, H. Ji, Incremental joint extraction of entity mentions and relations., in:Proceedings of the 52rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, 2014, pp. 402–412.
Roth D, Yih W-t. Global inference for entity and relation identification via a linear programming formulation. Introduction to statistical relational learning. 2007:553-580.
Yang B, Cardie C. Joint Inference for Fine-grained Opinion Extraction[C]//Proceedings of the 51st Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, 2013: 1640-1649.
Miwa M, Bansal M. End-to-End Relation Extraction using LSTMs on Sequences and Tree Structures[C]//Proceedings of the Association for Computational Linguistics, 2016:1105-1116.
Acknowledgements
Not applicable.
About this supplement
This article has been published as part of BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making Volume 19 Supplement 10, 2019: Selected Articles from the BioCreative/OHNLP Challenge 2018. The full contents of the supplement are available online at https://bmcmedinformdecismak.biomedcentral.com/articles/supplements/volume-19-supplement-10.
Funding
This work is supported in part by grants: NSFCs (National Natural Science Foundations of China) (U1813215, 61876052 and 61573118), Special Foundation for Technology Research Program of Guangdong Province (2015B010131010), Strategic Emerging Industry Development Special Funds of Shenzhen (JCYJ20170307150528934 and JCYJ20180306172232154), Innovation Fund of Harbin Institute of Technology (HIT.NSRIF.2017052).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
The work presented here was carried out in collaboration between all authors. XS, DJ and BT designed joint learning methods and experiments. Data processing was done by YH, DJ and YH designed pipeline methods and experiments. DJ designed the rule to do post processing. DJ and BT contributed to the writing of the manuscript. XW, QC, and JY provided guidance and reviewed the manuscript critically. All authors have approved the final manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Ethics approval and consent to participate
Not applicable.
Consent for publication
Not applicable.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Additional information
Publisher’s Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
About this article
Cite this article
Shi, X., Jiang, D., Huang, Y. et al. Family history information extraction via deep joint learning. BMC Med Inform Decis Mak 19 (Suppl 10), 277 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12911-019-0995-5
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12911-019-0995-5