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SymptomID: A Framework for Rapid Symptom Identification in Pandemics Using News Reports

Published: 08 September 2021 Publication History

Abstract

The ability to quickly learn fundamentals about a new infectious disease, such as how it is transmitted, the incubation period, and related symptoms, is crucial in any novel pandemic. For instance, rapid identification of symptoms can enable interventions for dampening the spread of the disease. Traditionally, symptoms are learned from research publications associated with clinical studies. However, clinical studies are often slow and time intensive, and hence delays can have dire consequences in a rapidly spreading pandemic like we have seen with COVID-19. In this article, we introduce SymptomID, a modular artificial intelligence–based framework for rapid identification of symptoms associated with novel pandemics using publicly available news reports. SymptomID is built using the state-of-the-art natural language processing model (Bidirectional Encoder Representations for Transformers) to extract symptoms from publicly available news reports and cluster-related symptoms together to remove redundancy. Our proposed framework requires minimal training data, because it builds on a pre-trained language model. In this study, we present a case study of SymptomID using news articles about the current COVID-19 pandemic. Our COVID-19 symptom extraction module, trained on 225 articles, achieves an F1 score of over 0.8. SymptomID can correctly identify well-established symptoms (e.g., “fever” and “cough”) and less-prevalent symptoms (e.g., “rashes,” “hair loss,” “brain fog”) associated with the novel coronavirus. We believe this framework can be extended and easily adapted in future pandemics to quickly learn relevant insights that are fundamental for understanding and combating a new infectious disease.

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Published In

cover image ACM Transactions on Management Information Systems
ACM Transactions on Management Information Systems  Volume 12, Issue 4
December 2021
225 pages
ISSN:2158-656X
EISSN:2158-6578
DOI:10.1145/3483349
Issue’s Table of Contents
Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected].

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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 08 September 2021
Accepted: 01 April 2021
Revised: 01 March 2021
Received: 01 September 2020
Published in TMIS Volume 12, Issue 4

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Author Tags

  1. Symptom identification
  2. named entity extraction
  3. BERT
  4. novel pandemics
  5. COVID-19
  6. news articles

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  • Research-article
  • Refereed

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  • National Science Foundation (NSF)

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Cited By

View all
  • (2024)CafeLLM: Context-Aware Fine-Grained Semantic Clustering Using Large Language ModelsGeneralizing from Limited Resources in the Open World10.1007/978-981-97-6125-8_6(66-81)Online publication date: 28-Jul-2024
  • (2023)A Human-in-the-Loop Segmented Mixed-Effects Modeling Method for Analyzing Wearables DataACM Transactions on Management Information Systems10.1145/356427614:2(1-17)Online publication date: 25-Jan-2023
  • (2022)Learning the Morphological and Syntactic Grammars for Named Entity RecognitionInformation10.3390/info1302004913:2(49)Online publication date: 20-Jan-2022
  • (2021)Introduction to the Special Section on Using AI and Data Science to Handle Pandemics and Related DisruptionsACM Transactions on Management Information Systems10.1145/348696912:4(1-2)Online publication date: 22-Oct-2021

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