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Page 1: Modeling arguments in scientific papers ArgDiaP 2014 05-23

Modeling Arguments in Scientific Papers to Support Pharmacists

Jodi Schneider, Carol Collins, Lisa E Hines, John R Horn, and Richard Boyce

12th Argumentation, Dialogue, Persuasion conference (ArgDiaP 2014) Warsaw, Poland2014-05-25

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Are you taking any other medications?

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Checks for known drug interactions

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Prescribers consult drug interaction references…

Medscape EpocratesMicromedex 2.0

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…which are maintained by expert pharmacists

Medscape EpocratesMicromedex 2.0

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Goal: Support evidence-based updates to drug-interaction reference DBs

• Make sense of the EVIDENCE– New clinical trials– Adverse drug event reports– Drug product labels– Updates to regulatory

information (U.S. FDA,…)– …

• Significant discrepancies between different drug-interaction reference DBs

http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=183454

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Drug Interaction Knowledge Base (DIKB) - Boyce 2007-2009

– Hand-constructed knowledge base– Safety issues when 2 drugs are taken together– Focus is on EVIDENCE

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Drug Interaction Knowledge Base (DIKB) - Boyce 2007-2009

– Hand-constructed knowledge base– Safety issues when 2 drugs are taken together– Focus is on EVIDENCE

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DIKB supports queries about assertions & evidence:

• Get all assertions that are supported by a U.S. FDA regulatory guidance statement

• Are the evidence use assumptions are concordant, unique, and non-ambiguous?

• Which assertions are supported/refuted by just one type of evidence?

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Limitations of DIKB v1.2

• Minimal argumentation model– swanco:citesAsSupportingEvidence– swanco:citesAsRefutingEvidence

• Cannot recover the source text– Document-level citation– Quote & section citation preferrable

• Level of detail– Want more detail on data, methods, materials

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Record deeper relationships between assertions and evidence

• Assertions – “there (is/is not) an interaction between A & B”– “Enzyme E reduces clearance of drug D by 25%”

• Evidence– Scientific literature– Drug product labeling– U.S. FDA guidance documents

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Micropublication: Claim + Support (e.g. Attribution)

Micropublications: a Semantic Model for Claims, Evidence, Arguments and Annotations in Biomedical CommunicationsTim Clark, Paolo N. Ciccarese, Carole A. Goblehttp://arxiv.org/abs/1305.3506

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Constructs claim-argument network across scientific papers

Micropublications: a Semantic Model for Claims, Evidence, Arguments and Annotations in Biomedical CommunicationsTim Clark, Paolo N. Ciccarese, Carole A. Goblehttp://arxiv.org/abs/1305.3506

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Model Data, Methods, Materials, References

Micropublications: a Semantic Model for Claims, Evidence, Arguments and Annotations in Biomedical CommunicationsTim Clark, Paolo N. Ciccarese, Carole A. Goblehttp://arxiv.org/abs/1305.3506

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Micropublications Ontology

Micropublications: a Semantic Model for Claims, Evidence, Arguments and Annotations in Biomedical CommunicationsTim Clark, Paolo N. Ciccarese, Carole A. Goblehttp://arxiv.org/abs/1305.3506

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What does this do for the DIKB

• Network of claims with supports & challenges• Can record materials, methods, data• Quotes can be naturally linked into the graph• We can query for every mp:Claim that has

no support.– An assumption (mp:Claim)– Can have its own support graph, specified once– We can query the support graph

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"escitalopram does not inhibit CYP2D6"

Support graph Challenge graph

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Support graph

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Methods

Methods section of challenge graph

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Textual quotes

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• Evidence

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Direct Annotation with Domeo

http://swan.mindinformatics.org/ Paolo N Ciccarese

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From individual documents to a searchable claim-argument network

• "Pay as you go" annotation of source documents with Domeo & Micropublications

• Generates claim-argument network– Supports & challenges– Materials, methods, data– Quotes linked into the graph– … within & across documents

• Query support


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