A comparison study of topic modeling based literature analysis by using full texts and abstracts of scientific articles: a case of COVID-19 research

Author:

Cao QiangORCID,Cheng XianORCID,Liao ShaoyiORCID

Abstract

PurposeHow to extract useful information from a very large volume of literature is a great challenge for librarians. Topic modeling technique, which is a machine learning algorithm to uncover latent thematic structures from large collections of documents, is a widespread approach in literature analysis, especially with the rapid growth of academic literature. In this paper, a comparison of topic modeling based literature analysis has been done using full texts and abstracts of articles.Design/methodology/approachThe authors conduct a comparison study of topic modeling on full-text paper and corresponding abstract to assess the influence of the different types of documents been used as input for topic modeling. In particular, the authors use the large volumes of COVID-19 research literature as a case study for topic modeling based literature analysis. The authors illustrate the research topics, research trends and topic similarity of COVID-19 research by using Latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA) and topic visualization method.FindingsThe authors found 14 research topics for COVID-19 research. The authors also found that the topic similarity between using full-text paper and corresponding abstract is higher when more documents are analyzed.Originality/valueFirst, this study contributes to the literature analysis approach. The comparison study can help us understand the influence of the different types of documents on the results of topic modeling analysis. Second, the authors present an overview of COVID-19 research by summarizing 14 research topics for it. This automated literature analysis can help specialists in the health and medical domain or other people to quickly grasp the structured morphology of the current studies for COVID-19.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Library and Information Sciences,Information Systems

Reference57 articles.

1. Evaluating topic coherence using distributional semantics,2013

2. 'The COVID-19 (Coronavirus) pandemic: reflections on the roles of librarians and information professionals;Health Information and Libraries Journal,2020

3. R&D partnerships: an exploratory approach to the role of structural variables in joint project performance;Technological Forecasting and Social Change,2015

4. Probabilistic topic models;Communications of the ACM,2012

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