Abstract:
Construction of medical knowledge bases for use in expert systems is an arduous task.
We propose a procedure for obtaining medical knowledge via automated analysis of citations
found in the National Library of Medicine’s Medline
® database. In this method, simple pattern of keywords and subheading co-occurrences
are detected in the keyword descriptor portion of the citations. Each pattern corresponds
to a fact, expressed as a semantic relationship between medical concepts. We have
constructed a set of 504 pattern-matching rules and applied it to a set of 673 Medline
® citations to produce 2,795 such facts. The results are presented of an analysis of
the syntactic and semantic features of these facts to understand the kinds of knowledge
than can be obtained through our method and speculate on the potential uses and pitfalls
for knowledge of this type.
Key-Words
Computer Reasoning - Knowledge Acquisition - Knowledge Bases - M
edline