4.7 Article

STonKGs: a sophisticated transformer trained on biomedical text and knowledge graphs

Journal

BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 38, Issue 6, Pages 1648-1656

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btac001

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Fraunhofer Cluster of Excellence 'Cognitive Internet Technologies'
  2. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Automating Scientific Knowledge Extraction (ASKE) program [HR00111990009]

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In this study, a multimodal model called STonKGs, based on Transformer, is proposed to generate better representations of biological knowledge by combining knowledge graphs and biomedical text data. The results demonstrate that STonKGs outperforms baseline models in various classification tasks and can be adapted to other transfer learning applications.
Motivation: The majority of biomedical knowledge is stored in structured databases or as unstructured text in scientific publications. This vast amount of information has led to numerous machine learning-based biological applications using either text through natural language processing (NLP) or structured data through knowledge graph embedding models. However, representations based on a single modality are inherently limited. Results: To generate better representations of biological knowledge, we propose STonKGs, a Sophisticated Transformer trained on biomedical text and Knowledge Graphs (KGs). This multimodal Transformer uses combined input sequences of structured information from KGs and unstructured text data from biomedical literature to learn joint representations in a shared embedding space. First, we pre-trained STonKGs on a knowledge base assembled by the Integrated Network and Dynamical Reasoning Assembler consisting of millions of text-triple pairs extracted from biomedical literature by multiple NLP systems. Then, we benchmarked STonKGs against three baseline models trained on either one of the modalities (i.e. text or KG) across eight different classification tasks, each corresponding to a different biological application. Our results demonstrate that STonKGs outperforms both baselines, especially on the more challenging tasks with respect to the number of classes, improving upon the F1-score of the best baseline by up to 0.084 (i.e. from 0.881 to 0.965). Finally, our pre-trained model as well as the model architecture can be adapted to various other transfer learning applications.

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