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Get Free AccessOver the past decades, the number of published materials science articles has increased manyfold. Now, a major bottleneck in the materials discovery pipeline arises in connecting new results with the previously established literature. A potential solution to this problem is to map the unstructured raw-text of published articles onto a structured database entry that allows for programmatic querying. To this end, we apply text-mining with named entity recognition (NER), along with entity normalization, for large-scale information extraction from the published materials science literature. The NER is based on supervised machine learning with a recurrent neural network architecture, and the model is trained to extract summary-level information from materials science documents, including: inorganic material mentions, sample descriptors, phase labels, material properties and applications, as well as any synthesis and characterization methods used. Our classifer, with an overall accuracy (f1) of 87% on a test set, is applied to information extraction from 3.27 million materials science abstracts - the most information-dense section of published articles.Overall, we extract more than 80 million materials-science-related named entities, and the content of each abstract is represented as a database entry in a structured format. Our database shows far greater recall in document retrieval when compared to traditional text-based searches due to an entity normalization procedure that recognizes synonyms. We demonstrate that simple database queries can be used to answer complex \meta-questions" of the published literature that would have previously required laborious, manual literature searches to answer. All of our data has been made freely available for bulk download; we have also made a public facing application programming interface (https://github.com/materialsintelligence/matscholar) and website http://matscholar.herokuapp.com/search for easy interfacing with the data, trained models and functionality described in this paper. These results will allow researchers to access targeted information on a scale and with a speed that has not been previously available, and can be expected to accelerate the pace of future materials science discovery.
Leigh Weston, Vahe Tshitoyan, John Dagdelen, Olga Kononova, Kristin A. Persson, Gerbrand Ceder, Anubhav Jain (2019). Named Entity Recognition and Normalization Applied to Large-Scale Information Extraction from the Materials Science Literature. , DOI: https://doi.org/10.26434/chemrxiv.8226068.v1.
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Type
Preprint
Year
2019
Authors
7
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.26434/chemrxiv.8226068.v1
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