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Article
Evaluation of Standard and Semantically-Augmented Distance Metrics for Neurology Patients
BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making
  • Daniel B. Hier
  • Jonathan Kopel
  • Steven U. Brint
  • Donald C. Wunsch, Missouri University of Science and Technology
  • Gayla R. Olbricht, Missouri University of Science and Technology
  • Sima Azizi
  • Blaine Allen
Abstract

Background: Patient distances can be calculated based on signs and symptoms derived from an ontological hierarchy. There is controversy as to whether patient distance metrics that consider the semantic similarity between concepts can outperform standard patient distance metrics that are agnostic to concept similarity. The choice of distance metric can dominate the performance of classification or clustering algorithms. Our objective was to determine if semantically augmented distance metrics would outperform standard metrics on machine learning tasks.

Methods: We converted the neurological findings from 382 published neurology cases into sets of concepts with corresponding machine-readable codes. We calculated patient distances by four different metrics (cosine distance, a semantically augmented cosine distance, Jaccard distance, and a semantically augmented bipartite distance). Semantic augmentation for two of the metrics depended on concept similarities from a hierarchical neuro-ontology. For machine learning algorithms, we used the patient diagnosis as the ground truth label and patient findings as machine learning features. We assessed classification accuracy for four classifiers and cluster quality for two clustering algorithms for each of the distance metrics.

Results: Inter-patient distances were smaller when the distance metric was semantically augmented. Classification accuracy and cluster quality were not significantly different by distance metric.

Conclusion: Although semantic augmentation reduced inter-patient distances, we did not find improved classification accuracy or improved cluster quality with semantically augmented patient distance metrics when applied to a dataset of neurology patients. Further work is needed to assess the utility of semantically augmented patient distances.

Department(s)
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Second Department
Computer Science
Third Department
Mathematics and Statistics
Research Center/Lab(s)
Center for High Performance Computing Research
Second Research Center/Lab
Intelligent Systems Center
Comments

Army Research Laboratory, Grant W911 NF-14-2-0034

Keywords and Phrases
  • Distance Metrics,
  • Machine Learning,
  • Neurology,
  • Ontologies,
  • Patient Classification,
  • Patient Clustering,
  • Patient Distances,
  • Semantic Augmentation
Document Type
Article - Journal
Document Version
Final Version
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2020 The Authors, All rights reserved.
Creative Commons Licensing
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
Publication Date
8-26-2020
Publication Date
26 Aug 2020
PubMed ID
32843023
Citation Information
Daniel B. Hier, Jonathan Kopel, Steven U. Brint, Donald C. Wunsch, et al.. "Evaluation of Standard and Semantically-Augmented Distance Metrics for Neurology Patients" BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making Vol. 20 Iss. 1 (2020) ISSN: 1472-6947
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/gayla-olbricht/59/