ASU Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.
In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.
Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.
Filtering by
- All Subjects: Bioinformatics
- Creators: Greenes, Robert
This work presents ADRMine that uses a Conditional Random Field (CRF) sequence tagger for extraction of complex health-related concepts. It utilizes a large volume of unlabeled user posts for automatic learning of embedding cluster features, a novel application of deep learning in modeling the similarity between the tokens. ADRMine significantly improved the medical NER performance compared to the baseline systems.
This work also presents DeepHealthMiner, a deep learning pipeline for health-related concept extraction. Most of the machine learning methods require sophisticated task-specific manual feature design which is a challenging step in processing the informal and noisy content of social media. DeepHealthMiner automatically learns classification features using neural networks and utilizing a large volume of unlabeled user posts. Using a relatively small labeled training set, DeepHealthMiner could accurately identify most of the concepts, including the consumer expressions that were not observed in the training data or in the standard medical lexicons outperforming the state-of-the-art baseline techniques.