TY - JOUR
T1 - LSD600
T2 - The first corpus of biomedical abstracts annotated with lifestyle-disease relations
AU - Nourani, Esmaeil
AU - Makri, Evangelia Mantelena
AU - Mao, Xiqing
AU - Pyysalo, Sampo
AU - Brunak, Søren
AU - Nastou, Katerina
AU - Jensen, Lars Juhl
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Lifestyle factors (LSFs) are increasingly recognized as instrumental in both the development and control of diseases. Despite their importance, there is a lack of methods to extract relations between LSFs and diseases from the literature, a step necessary to consolidate the currently available knowledge into a structured form. As simple co-occurrence-based relation extraction (RE) approaches are unable to distinguish between the different types of LSF-disease relations, context-Aware models such as transformers are required to extract and classify these relations into specific relation types. However, no comprehensive LSF-disease RE system existed, nor a corpus suitable for developing one. We present LSD600 (available at https://zenodo.org/records/13952449), the first corpus specifically designed for LSF-disease RE, comprising 600 abstracts with 1900 relations of eight distinct types between 5027 diseases and 6930 LSF entities. We evaluated LSD600's quality by training a RoBERTa model on the corpus, achieving an F-score of 68.5% for the multilabel RE task on the held-out test set. We further validated LSD600 by using the trained model on the two Nutrition-Disease and FoodDisease datasets, where it achieved F-scores of 70.7% and 80.7%, respectively. Building on these performance results, LSD600 and the RE system trained on it can be valuable resources to fill the existing gap in this area and pave the way for downstream applications.
AB - Lifestyle factors (LSFs) are increasingly recognized as instrumental in both the development and control of diseases. Despite their importance, there is a lack of methods to extract relations between LSFs and diseases from the literature, a step necessary to consolidate the currently available knowledge into a structured form. As simple co-occurrence-based relation extraction (RE) approaches are unable to distinguish between the different types of LSF-disease relations, context-Aware models such as transformers are required to extract and classify these relations into specific relation types. However, no comprehensive LSF-disease RE system existed, nor a corpus suitable for developing one. We present LSD600 (available at https://zenodo.org/records/13952449), the first corpus specifically designed for LSF-disease RE, comprising 600 abstracts with 1900 relations of eight distinct types between 5027 diseases and 6930 LSF entities. We evaluated LSD600's quality by training a RoBERTa model on the corpus, achieving an F-score of 68.5% for the multilabel RE task on the held-out test set. We further validated LSD600 by using the trained model on the two Nutrition-Disease and FoodDisease datasets, where it achieved F-scores of 70.7% and 80.7%, respectively. Building on these performance results, LSD600 and the RE system trained on it can be valuable resources to fill the existing gap in this area and pave the way for downstream applications.
U2 - 10.1093/database/baae129
DO - 10.1093/database/baae129
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 39824652
AN - SCOPUS:85215369394
VL - 2025
JO - Database : the journal of biological databases and curation
JF - Database : the journal of biological databases and curation
SN - 1758-0463
M1 - baae129
ER -