Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

January 17, 2014

Rule-based deduplication…

Filed under: Deduplication,Information Retrieval,Topic Maps,Uncategorized — Patrick Durusau @ 8:24 pm

Rule-based deduplication of article records from bibliographic databases by Yu Jiang, et.al.

Abstract:

We recently designed and deployed a metasearch engine, Metta, that sends queries and retrieves search results from five leading biomedical databases: PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. Because many articles are indexed in more than one of these databases, it is desirable to deduplicate the retrieved article records. This is not a trivial problem because data fields contain a lot of missing and erroneous entries, and because certain types of information are recorded differently (and inconsistently) in the different databases. The present report describes our rule-based method for deduplicating article records across databases and includes an open-source script module that can be deployed freely. Metta was designed to satisfy the particular needs of people who are writing systematic reviews in evidence-based medicine. These users want the highest possible recall in retrieval, so it is important to err on the side of not deduplicating any records that refer to distinct articles, and it is important to perform deduplication online in real time. Our deduplication module is designed with these constraints in mind. Articles that share the same publication year are compared sequentially on parameters including PubMed ID number, digital object identifier, journal name, article title and author list, using text approximation techniques. In a review of Metta searches carried out by public users, we found that the deduplication module was more effective at identifying duplicates than EndNote without making any erroneous assignments.

I found this report encouraging, particularly when read along side Rule-based Information Extraction is Dead!…, with regard to merging rules authored by human editors.

Both reports indicate a pressing need for more complex rules than matching a URI for purposes of deduplication (merging in topic maps terminology).

I assume such rules would need to be easier for the average users to declare than TMCL.

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