Navigating the landscape of COVID-19 research through literature analysis: A bird's eye view

August 07, 2020 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐Ÿ› arXiv.org

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Authors Lana Yeganova, Rezarta Islamaj, Qingyu Chen, Robert Leaman, Alexis Allot, Chin-Hsuan Wei, Donald C. Comeau, Won Kim, Yifan Peng, W. John Wilbur, Zhiyong Lu arXiv ID 2008.03397 Category cs.DL: Digital Libraries Cross-listed cs.DB, cs.IR, cs.LG Citations 8 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 2 months ago
Abstract
Timely access to accurate scientific literature in the battle with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic is critical. This unprecedented public health risk has motivated research towards understanding the disease in general, identifying drugs to treat the disease, developing potential vaccines, etc. This has given rise to a rapidly growing body of literature that doubles in number of publications every 20 days as of May 2020. Providing medical professionals with means to quickly analyze the literature and discover growing areas of knowledge is necessary for addressing their question and information needs. In this study we analyze the LitCovid collection, 13,369 COVID-19 related articles found in PubMed as of May 15th, 2020 with the purpose of examining the landscape of literature and presenting it in a format that facilitates information navigation and understanding. We do that by applying state-of-the-art named entity recognition, classification, clustering and other NLP techniques. By applying NER tools, we capture relevant bioentities (such as diseases, internal body organs, etc.) and assess the strength of their relationship with COVID-19 by the extent they are discussed in the corpus. We also collect a variety of symptoms and co-morbidities discussed in reference to COVID-19. Our clustering algorithm identifies topics represented by groups of related terms, and computes clusters corresponding to documents associated with the topic terms. Among the topics we observe several that persist through the duration of multiple weeks and have numerous associated documents, as well several that appear as emerging topics with fewer documents. All the tools and data are publicly available, and this framework can be applied to any literature collection. Taken together, these analyses produce a comprehensive, synthesized view of COVID-19 research to facilitate knowledge discovery from literature.
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