Using natural language processing techniques to extract information on the properties and functionalities of energetic materials from large text corpora
March 01, 2019 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐ arXiv.org
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Authors
Daniel C. Elton, Dhruv Turakhia, Nischal Reddy, Zois Boukouvalas, Mark D. Fuge, Ruth M. Doherty, Peter W. Chung
arXiv ID
1903.00415
Category
cs.CL: Computation & Language
Cross-listed
cond-mat.mtrl-sci
Citations
18
Venue
arXiv.org
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
The number of scientific journal articles and reports being published about energetic materials every year is growing exponentially, and therefore extracting relevant information and actionable insights from the latest research is becoming a considerable challenge. In this work we explore how techniques from natural language processing and machine learning can be used to automatically extract chemical insights from large collections of documents. We first describe how to download and process documents from a variety of sources - journal articles, conference proceedings (including NTREM), the US Patent & Trademark Office, and the Defense Technical Information Center archive on archive.org. We present a custom NLP pipeline which uses open source NLP tools to identify the names of chemical compounds and relates them to function words ("underwater", "rocket", "pyrotechnic") and property words ("elastomer", "non-toxic"). After explaining how word embeddings work we compare the utility of two popular word embeddings - word2vec and GloVe. Chemical-chemical and chemical-application relationships are obtained by doing computations with word vectors. We show that word embeddings capture latent information about energetic materials, so that related materials appear close together in the word embedding space.
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