This before that: Causal precedence in the biomedical domain

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Abstract

Causal precedence between biochemical interactions is crucial in the biomedical domain, because it transforms collections of individual interactions, e.g., bindings and phosphorylations, into the causal mechanisms needed to inform meaningful search and inference. Here, we analyze causal precedence in the biomedical domain as distinct from open-domain, temporal precedence. First, we describe a novel, hand-annotated text corpus of causal precedence in the biomedical domain. Second, we use this corpus to investigate a battery of models of precedence, covering rule-based, feature-based, and latent representation models. The highestperforming individual model achieved a micro F1 of 43 points, approaching the best performers on the simpler temporalonly precedence tasks. Feature-based and latent representation models each outperform the rule-based models, but their performance is complementary to one another. We apply a sieve-based architecture to capitalize on this lack of overlap, achieving a micro F1 score of 46 points.

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Hahn-Powell, G., Bell, D., Valenzuela-Escárcega, M. A., & Surdeanu, M. (2016). This before that: Causal precedence in the biomedical domain. In BioNLP 2016 - Proceedings of the 15th Workshop on Biomedical Natural Language Processing (pp. 146–155). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/w16-2920

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