BioASQ: A challenge on large-scale biomedical semantic indexing and question answering

George Tsatsaronis, Michael Schroeder, Georgios Paliouras, Yannis Almirantis, Ion Androutsopoulos, Eric Gaussier, Patrick Gallinari, Thierry Artieres, Michael R. Alvers, Matthias Zschunke, Axel Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

60 Scopus citations

Abstract

This article provides an overview of BIOASQ, a new competition on biomedical semantic indexing and question answering (QA). BIOASQ aims to push towards systems that will allow biomedical workers to express their information needs in natural language and that will return concise and user-understandable answers by combining information from multiple sources of different kinds, including biomedical articles, databases, and ontologies. BIOASQ encourages participants to adopt semantic indexing as a means to combine multiple information sources and to facilitate the matching of questions to answers. It also adopts a broad semantic indexing and QA architecture that subsumes current relevant approaches, even though no current system instantiates all of its components. Hence, the architecture can also be seen as our view of how relevant work from fields such as information retrieval, hierarchical classification, question answering, ontologies, and linked data can be combined, extended, and applied to biomedical question answering. BIOASQ will develop publicly available benchmarks and it will adopt and possibly refine existing evaluation measures. The evaluation infrastructure of the competition will remain publicly available beyond the end of BIOASQ.

Original languageEnglish
Pages92-98
Number of pages7
StatePublished - 2012
Externally publishedYes
Event2012 AAAI Fall Symposium - Arlington, VA, United States
Duration: Nov 2 2012Nov 4 2012

Conference

Conference2012 AAAI Fall Symposium
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityArlington, VA
Period11/2/1211/4/12

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'BioASQ: A challenge on large-scale biomedical semantic indexing and question answering'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this