ADAM: another database of abbreviations in MEDLINE
journal contribution
posted on 2008-02-27, 00:00authored byWei Zhou, Vetle I. Torvik, Neil R. Smalheiser
Motivation: Abbreviations are an important type of terminology in
the biomedical domain. Although several groups have already created
databases of biomedical abbreviations, these are either not public, or
are not comprehensive, or focus exclusively on acronym-type abbreviations.
We have created another abbreviation database, ADAM,
which covers commonly used abbreviations and their definitions
(or long-forms) within MEDLINE titles and abstracts, including both
acronym and non-acronym abbreviations.
Results: A model of recognizing abbreviations and their long-forms
from titles and abstracts of MEDLINE (2006 baseline) was employed.
After grouping morphological variants, 59 405 abbreviation/long-form
pairs were identified. ADAM shows high precision (97.4%) and includes
most of the frequently used abbreviations contained in the Unified
Medical Language System (UMLS) Lexicon and the Stanford
Abbreviation Database. Conversely, one-third of abbreviations in
ADAM are novel insofar as they are not included in either database.
About 19% of the novel abbreviations are non-acronym-type and these
cover at least seven different types of short-form/long-form pairs.
Availability: A free, public query interface to ADAM is available at
http://arrowsmith.psych.uic.edu, and the entire database can be
downloaded as a text file.