Auditing hierarchical cycles to locate other inconsistencies in the UMLS.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2011

Abstract

A cycle in the parent relationship hierarchy of the UMLS is a configuration that effectively makes some concept(s) an ancestor of itself. Such a structural inconsistency can easily be found automatically. A previous strategy for disconnecting cycles is to break them with the deletion of one or more parent relationships-irrespective of the correctness of the deleted relationships. A methodology is introduced for auditing of cycles that seeks to discover and delete erroneous relationships only. Cycles involving three concepts are the primary consideration. Hypotheses about the high probability of locating an erroneous parent relationship in a cycle are proposed and confirmed with statistical confidence and lend credence to the auditing approach. A cycle may serve as an indicator of other non-structural inconsistencies that are otherwise difficult to detect automatically. An extensive auditing example shows how a cycle can indicate further inconsistencies.

Identifier

84869876412 (Scopus)

Publication Title

AMIA Annual Symposium Proceedings AMIA Symposium AMIA Symposium

e-ISSN

1942597X

PubMed ID

22195107

First Page

529

Last Page

536

Volume

2011

Grant

R01LM008445

Fund Ref

U.S. National Library of Medicine

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