Does BERT need domain adaptation for clinical negation detection?

Author:

Lin Chen1,Bethard Steven2ORCID,Dligach Dmitriy3,Sadeque Farig14,Savova Guergana1,Miller Timothy A1

Affiliation:

1. Computational Health Informatics Program, Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

2. School of Information, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA

3. Department of Computer Science, Loyola University Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA

4. Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Abstract

Abstract Introduction Classifying whether concepts in an unstructured clinical text are negated is an important unsolved task. New domain adaptation and transfer learning methods can potentially address this issue. Objective We examine neural unsupervised domain adaptation methods, introducing a novel combination of domain adaptation with transformer-based transfer learning methods to improve negation detection. We also want to better understand the interaction between the widely used bidirectional encoder representations from transformers (BERT) system and domain adaptation methods. Materials and Methods We use 4 clinical text datasets that are annotated with negation status. We evaluate a neural unsupervised domain adaptation algorithm and BERT, a transformer-based model that is pretrained on massive general text datasets. We develop an extension to BERT that uses domain adversarial training, a neural domain adaptation method that adds an objective to the negation task, that the classifier should not be able to distinguish between instances from 2 different domains. Results The domain adaptation methods we describe show positive results, but, on average, the best performance is obtained by plain BERT (without the extension). We provide evidence that the gains from BERT are likely not additive with the gains from domain adaptation. Discussion Our results suggest that, at least for the task of clinical negation detection, BERT subsumes domain adaptation, implying that BERT is already learning very general representations of negation phenomena such that fine-tuning even on a specific corpus does not lead to much overfitting. Conclusion Despite being trained on nonclinical text, the large training sets of models like BERT lead to large gains in performance for the clinical negation detection task.

Funder

National Library of Medicine

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Informatics

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