Faculty, Staff and Student Publications

Publication Date

1-1-2022

Journal

Journal of Biomedical Informatics

Abstract

In this paper, we developed a feasible and efficient deep-learning-based framework to combine the United States (US) natality data for the last five decades, with changing variables and factors, into a consistent database. We constructed a graph based on the property and elements of databases, including variables, and conducted a graph convolutional network (GCN) to learn the embeddings of variables on the constructed graph, where the learned embeddings implied the similarity of variables. Specifically, we devised a loss function with a slack margin and a banlist mechanism (for a random walk) to learn the desired structure (two nodes sharing more information were more similar to each other.), and developed an active learning mechanism to conduct the harmonization. Toward a total of 9,321 variables from 49 databases (i.e., 783 stemmed variables, from 1970 to 2018), we applied our model iteratively together with human reviews for four rounds, then obtained 323 hyperchains of variables. During the harmonization, the first round of our model achieved recall and precision of 87.56%, 57.70%, respectively. Our harmonized graph neural network (HGNN) method provides a feasible and efficient way to connect relevant databases at a meta-level. Adapting to the database's property and characteristics, HGNN can learn patterns globally, which is powerful to discover the similarity between variables among databases. Our proposed method provides an effective way to reduce the manual effort in database harmonization and integration of fragmented data into useful databases for future research.

Keywords

Databases, Factual, Humans, Neural Networks, Computer, United States

DOI

10.1016/j.jbi.2021.103974

PMID

4902551

PMCID

PMC8766952

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

1-1-2023

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Author MSS

Published Open-Access

yes

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