Publicación: Semi‑supervised incremental learning with few examples for discovering medical association rules
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Fecha
2022
Autores
Sánchez‑de‑Madariaga, Ricardo
Cantero Escribano, José Miguel
Editor/a
Director/a
Tutor/a
Coordinador/a
Prologuista
Revisor/a
Ilustrador/a
Derechos de acceso
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0 Internacional
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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ISSN de la revista
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Editor
BioMed Central
Resumen
Background: Association Rules are one of the main ways to represent structural patterns underlying raw data. They represent dependencies between sets of observations contained in the data. The associations established by these rules are very useful in the medical domain, for example in the predictive health field. Classic algorithms for association rule mining give rise to huge amounts of possible rules that should be filtered in order to select those most likely to be true. Most of the proposed techniques for these tasks are unsupervised. However, the accuracy provided by unsupervised systems is limited. Conversely, resorting to annotated data for training supervised systems is expensive and time‑consuming. The purpose of this research is to design a new semi‑supervised algorithm that performs like supervised algorithms but uses an affordable amount of training data. Methods: In this work we propose a new semi‑supervised data mining model that combines unsupervised techniques (Fisher’s exact test) with limited supervision. Starting with a small seed of annotated data, the model improves results (F‑measure) obtained, using a fully supervised system (standard supervised ML algorithms). The idea is based on utilising the agreement between the predictions of the supervised system and those of the unsupervised techniques in a series of iterative steps. Results: The new semi‑supervised ML algorithm improves the results of supervised algorithms computed using the F‑measure in the task of mining medical association rules, but training with an affordable amount of manually annotated data. Conclusions: Using a small amount of annotated data (which is easily achievable) leads to results similar to those of a supervised system. The proposal may be an important step for the practical development of techniques for mining association rules and generating new valuable scientific medical knowledge.
Descripción
Categorías UNESCO
Palabras clave
Medical records, Association rules discovery, Machine learning, Semi‑supervised approach
Citación
Centro
Facultades y escuelas::E.T.S. de Ingeniería Informática
Departamento
Lenguajes y Sistemas Informáticos