A content-based dataset recommendation system for researchers—a case study on Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) repository

Author:

Patra Braja Gopal1ORCID,Roberts Kirk2,Wu Hulin32

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biostatistics and Data Science, School of Public Health, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston/1200 Pressler Street, Suite E-833, Houston, TX, 77030, USA and

2. School of Biomedical Informatics, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston/7000 Fannin st. Suite 600, Houston, TX, 77030, USA

3. Department of Biostatistics and Data Science, School of Public Health, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston/1200 Pressler Street, Suite E-833, Houston, TX, 77030, USA

Abstract

Abstract It is a growing trend among researchers to make their data publicly available for experimental reproducibility and data reusability. Sharing data with fellow researchers helps in increasing the visibility of the work. On the other hand, there are researchers who are inhibited by the lack of data resources. To overcome this challenge, many repositories and knowledge bases have been established to date to ease data sharing. Further, in the past two decades, there has been an exponential increase in the number of datasets added to these dataset repositories. However, most of these repositories are domain-specific, and none of them can recommend datasets to researchers/users. Naturally, it is challenging for a researcher to keep track of all the relevant repositories for potential use. Thus, a dataset recommender system that recommends datasets to a researcher based on previous publications can enhance their productivity and expedite further research. This work adopts an information retrieval (IR) paradigm for dataset recommendation. We hypothesize that two fundamental differences exist between dataset recommendation and PubMed-style biomedical IR beyond the corpus. First, instead of keywords, the query is the researcher, embodied by his or her publications. Second, to filter the relevant datasets from non-relevant ones, researchers are better represented by a set of interests, as opposed to the entire body of their research. This second approach is implemented using a non-parametric clustering technique. These clusters are used to recommend datasets for each researcher using the cosine similarity between the vector representations of publication clusters and datasets. The maximum normalized discounted cumulative gain at 10 (NDCG@10), precision at 10 (p@10) partial and p@10 strict of 0.89, 0.78 and 0.61, respectively, were obtained using the proposed method after manual evaluation by five researchers. As per the best of our knowledge, this is the first study of its kind on content-based dataset recommendation. We hope that this system will further promote data sharing, offset the researchers’ workload in identifying the right dataset and increase the reusability of biomedical datasets. Database URL: http://genestudy.org/recommends/#/

Funder

Center for Big Data in Health Sciences

Cancer Research and Prevention Institute of Texas

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Information Systems

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