A Comparison of Word-based and Context-based Representations for Classification Problems in Health Informatics
June 13, 2019 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐ BioNLP@ACL
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Authors
Aditya Joshi, Sarvnaz Karimi, Ross Sparks, Cecile Paris, C Raina MacIntyre
arXiv ID
1906.05468
Category
cs.CL: Computation & Language
Cross-listed
cs.IR
Citations
15
Venue
BioNLP@ACL
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
Distributed representations of text can be used as features when training a statistical classifier. These representations may be created as a composition of word vectors or as context-based sentence vectors. We compare the two kinds of representations (word versus context) for three classification problems: influenza infection classification, drug usage classification and personal health mention classification. For statistical classifiers trained for each of these problems, context-based representations based on ELMo, Universal Sentence Encoder, Neural-Net Language Model and FLAIR are better than Word2Vec, GloVe and the two adapted using the MESH ontology. There is an improvement of 2-4% in the accuracy when these context-based representations are used instead of word-based representations.
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