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SparkText: Biomedical Text Mining on Big Data Framework

Author

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  • Zhan Ye
  • Ahmad P Tafti
  • Karen Y He
  • Kai Wang
  • Max M He

Abstract

Background: Many new biomedical research articles are published every day, accumulating rich information, such as genetic variants, genes, diseases, and treatments. Rapid yet accurate text mining on large-scale scientific literature can discover novel knowledge to better understand human diseases and to improve the quality of disease diagnosis, prevention, and treatment. Results: In this study, we designed and developed an efficient text mining framework called SparkText on a Big Data infrastructure, which is composed of Apache Spark data streaming and machine learning methods, combined with a Cassandra NoSQL database. To demonstrate its performance for classifying cancer types, we extracted information (e.g., breast, prostate, and lung cancers) from tens of thousands of articles downloaded from PubMed, and then employed Naïve Bayes, Support Vector Machine (SVM), and Logistic Regression to build prediction models to mine the articles. The accuracy of predicting a cancer type by SVM using the 29,437 full-text articles was 93.81%. While competing text-mining tools took more than 11 hours, SparkText mined the dataset in approximately 6 minutes. Conclusions: This study demonstrates the potential for mining large-scale scientific articles on a Big Data infrastructure, with real-time update from new articles published daily. SparkText can be extended to other areas of biomedical research.

Suggested Citation

  • Zhan Ye & Ahmad P Tafti & Karen Y He & Kai Wang & Max M He, 2016. "SparkText: Biomedical Text Mining on Big Data Framework," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 11(9), pages 1-15, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0162721
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0162721
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    Cited by:

    1. Aleksander Aristovnik & Dejan Ravšelj & Lan Umek, 2020. "A Bibliometric Analysis of COVID-19 across Science and Social Science Research Landscape," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 12(21), pages 1-30, November.

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