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Combining labelled and unlabelled data: a case study on Fisher kernels and transductive inference for biological entity recognition

We address the problem of using partially labelled data, eg large collections where only little data is annotated, for extracting biological entities. Our approach relies on a combination of probabilistic models, which we use to model the generation of entities and their context, and kernel machines, which implement powerful categories based on a similarity measure and some labelled data. This combination takes the form of the so-called Fisher kernels which implement a similarity based on an underlying probabilistic model. Such kernels are compared with transductive inference, an alternative approach to combining labelled and unlabelled data, again coupled with Support Vector Machines. Experiments are performed on a database of abstracts extracted from Medline.


Cyril Goutte, Hervé Déjean, Eric Gaussier, Nicola Cancedda and Jean-Michel Renders , Combining labelled and unlabelled data: a case study on Fisher kernels and transductive inference for biological entity recognition. In: Dan Roth and Antal van den Bosch (eds.), Proceedings of CoNLL-2002, Taipei, Taiwan, 2002, pp. 1-7. [ps] [ps.gz] [pdf] [bibtex]
Last update: September 06, 2002. erikt@uia.ua.ac.be