Deep Denoising of Raw Biomedical Knowledge Graph From COVID-19 Literature, LitCovid, and Pubtator: Framework Development and Validation

Chao Jiang, Victoria Ngo, Richard Chapman, Yue Yu, Hongfang Liu, Guoqian Jiang, Nansu Zong

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Multiple types of biomedical associations of knowledge graphs, including COVID-19-related ones, are constructed based on co-occurring biomedical entities retrieved from recent literature. However, the applications derived from these raw graphs (eg, association predictions among genes, drugs, and diseases) have a high probability of false-positive predictions as co-occurrences in the literature do not always mean there is a true biomedical association between two entities. Objective: Data quality plays an important role in training deep neural network models; however, most of the current work in this area has been focused on improving a model's performance with the assumption that the preprocessed data are clean. Here, we studied how to remove noise from raw knowledge graphs with limited labeled information. Methods: The proposed framework used generative-based deep neural networks to generate a graph that can distinguish the unknown associations in the raw training graph. Two generative adversarial network models, NetGAN and Cross-Entropy Low-rank Logits (CELL), were adopted for the edge classification (ie, link prediction), leveraging unlabeled link information based on a real knowledge graph built from LitCovid and Pubtator. Results: The performance of link prediction, especially in the extreme case of training data versus test data at a ratio of 1:9, demonstrated that the proposed method still achieved favorable results (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve >0.8 for the synthetic data set and 0.7 for the real data set), despite the limited amount of testing data available. Conclusions: Our preliminary findings showed the proposed framework achieved promising results for removing noise during data preprocessing of the biomedical knowledge graph, potentially improving the performance of downstream applications by providing cleaner data.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere38584
JournalJournal of medical Internet research
Volume24
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1 2022

Keywords

  • COVID-19
  • adversarial generative network
  • biomedical
  • deep denoising
  • knowledge graph
  • machine learning
  • network model
  • neural network
  • training data

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Health Informatics

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