A Hybrid Human-computer Approach to the Extraction of Scientific Facts from the Literature

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.procs.2016.05.338Get rights and content
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Abstract

A wealth of valuable data is locked within the millions of research articles published each year. Reading and extracting pertinent information from those articles has become an unmanageable task for scientists. This problem hinders scientific progress by making it hard to build on results buried in literature. Moreover, these data are loosely structured, encoded in manuscripts of various formats, embedded in different content types, and are, in general, not machine accessible. We present a hybrid human-computer solution for semi-automatically extracting scientific facts from literature. This solution combines an automated discovery, download, and extraction phase with a semi-expert crowd assembled from students to extract specific scientific facts. To evaluate our approach we apply it to a challenging molecular engineering scenario, extraction of a polymer property: the Flory-Huggins interaction parameter. We demonstrate useful contributions to a comprehensive database of polymer properties.

Keywords

Crowdsourcing
Information Extraction
Classification
Flory-Huggins
Materials Science

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Selection and peer-review under responsibility of the Scientific Programme Committee of ICCS 2016.