DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Hits 1 – 17 of 17

1
Evaluation and Cross-Comparison of Lexical Entities of Biological Interest (LexEBI) ...
Rebholz-Schuhmann, Dietrich; Kim, Jee-Hyub; Yan, Ying. - : Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2013
BASE
Show details
2
Evaluation and Cross-Comparison of Lexical Entities of Biological Interest (LexEBI)
Rebholz-Schuhmann, Dietrich; Kim, Jee-Hyub; Yan, Ying. - : Public Library of Science, 2013
BASE
Show details
3
Evaluation and Cross-Comparison of Lexical Entities of Biological Interest (LexEBI)
In: PLoS ONE. - 8, 10 (2013) , e75185, ISSN: 1932-6203 (2013)
BASE
Show details
4
Evaluation and cross-comparison of lexical entities of biological interest (LexEBI)
BASE
Show details
5
Evaluating gold standard corpora against gene/protein tagging solutions and lexical resources
BASE
Show details
6
Evaluating gold standard corpora against gene/protein tagging solutions and lexical resources
In: Rebholz-Schuhmann, Dietrich; Kafkas, Senay; Kim, Jee-hyub; Li, Chen; Yepes, Antonio Jimeno; Hoehndorf, Robert; Backofen, Rolf; Lewin, Ian (2013). Evaluating gold standard corpora against gene/protein tagging solutions and lexical resources. Journal of Biomedical Semantics, 4:28. (2013)
BASE
Show details
7
Evaluation and Cross-Comparison of Lexical Entities of Biological Interest (LexEBI)
In: Rebholz-Schuhmann, Dietrich; Kim, Jee-hyub; Yan, Ying; Dixit, Abhishek; Friteyre, Caroline; Hoehndorf, Robert; Backofen, Rolf; Lewin, Ian (2013). Evaluation and Cross-Comparison of Lexical Entities of Biological Interest (LexEBI). PLoS ONE, 8(10):e75185. (2013)
Abstract: MOTIVATION: Biomedical entities, their identifiers and names, are essential in the representation of biomedical facts and knowledge. In the same way, the complete set of biomedical and chemical terms, i.e. the biomedical "term space" (the "Lexeome"), forms a key resource to achieve the full integration of the scientific literature with biomedical data resources: any identified named entity can immediately be normalized to the correct database entry. This goal does not only require that we are aware of all existing terms, but would also profit from knowing all their senses and their semantic interpretation (ambiguities, nestedness). RESULT: This study compiles a resource for lexical terms of biomedical interest in a standard format (called "LexEBI"), determines the overall number of terms, their reuse in different resources and the nestedness of terms. LexEBI comprises references for protein and gene entries and their term variants and chemical entities amongst other terms. In addition, disease terms have been identified from Medline and PubmedCentral and added to LexEBI. Our analysis demonstrates that the baseforms of terms from the different semantic types show only little polysemous use. Nonetheless, the term variants of protein and gene names (PGNs) frequently contain species mentions, which should have been avoided according to protein annotation guidelines. Furthermore, the protein and gene entities as well as the chemical entities, both do comprise enzymes leading to hierarchical polysemy, and a large portion of PGNs make reference to a chemical entity. Altogether, according to our analysis based on the Medline distribution, 401,869 unique PGNs in the documents contain a reference to 25,022 chemical entities, 3,125 disease terms or 1,576 species mentions. CONCLUSION: LexEBI delivers the complete biomedical and chemical Lexeome in a standardized representation (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/Rebholz-srv/LexEBI/). The resource provides the disease terms as open source content, and fully interlinks terms across resources.
Keyword: 000 Computer science; biomedicine; Department of Informatics; knowledge & systems; lexeome; lexical resource
URL: https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/82207/1/RebholzSchuhmann-LexEbi-PlosOne-2013.pdf
https://doi.org/10.5167/uzh-82207
https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/82207/
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075185
BASE
Hide details
8
A First-Order Axiomatization of the Theory of Finite Trees
In: Journal of logic, language and information. - Dordrecht [u.a.] : Kluwer 4 (1995) 1, 5-40
OLC Linguistik
Show details
9
A first-order axiomatization of the theory of finite trees
BASE
Show details
10
A First-Order Axiomatization of the Theory of Finite Trees
In: IRCS Technical Reports Series (1995)
BASE
Show details
11
A Complete and Recursive Feature Theory ...
Backofen, Rolf; Smolka, Gert. - : arXiv, 1994
BASE
Show details
12
DISCO---An HPSG-based NLP System and its Application for Appointment Scheduling (Project Note) ...
BASE
Show details
13
DISCO - an HPSG-based NLP system and its application for appointment scheduling
BASE
Show details
14
A complete and recursive feature theory ...
Backofen, Rolf; Smolka, Gert. - : Universität des Saarlandes, 1992
BASE
Show details
15
A complete and recursive feature theory
BASE
Show details
16
Towards the integration of functions, relations and types in an AI programming language ...
Backofen, Rolf; Euler, Lutz; Görz, Günther. - : Universität des Saarlandes, 1991
BASE
Show details
17
Towards the integration of functions, relations and types in an AI programming language
BASE
Show details

Catalogues
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
Bibliographies
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
16
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern