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Review
Machine learning approaches to analysing textual injury surveillance data: a systematic review.
- Kirsten Vallmuur.
- Centre for Accident Research and Road Safety - Queensland, School of Psychology and Counselling, Faculty of Health, Queensland University of Technology, Kelvin Grove 4059, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Electronic address: k.vallmuur@qut.edu.au.
- Accid Anal Prev. 2015 Jun 1; 79: 41-9.
ObjectiveTo synthesise recent research on the use of machine learning approaches to mining textual injury surveillance data.DesignSystematic review.Data SourcesThe electronic databases which were searched included PubMed, Cinahl, Medline, Google Scholar, and Proquest. The bibliography of all relevant articles was examined and associated articles were identified using a snowballing technique.Selection CriteriaFor inclusion, articles were required to meet the following criteria: (a) used a health-related database, (b) focused on injury-related cases, AND used machine learning approaches to analyse textual data.MethodsThe papers identified through the search were screened resulting in 16 papers selected for review. Articles were reviewed to describe the databases and methodology used, the strength and limitations of different techniques, and quality assurance approaches used. Due to heterogeneity between studies meta-analysis was not performed.ResultsOccupational injuries were the focus of half of the machine learning studies and the most common methods described were Bayesian probability or Bayesian network based methods to either predict injury categories or extract common injury scenarios. Models were evaluated through either comparison with gold standard data or content expert evaluation or statistical measures of quality. Machine learning was found to provide high precision and accuracy when predicting a small number of categories, was valuable for visualisation of injury patterns and prediction of future outcomes. However, difficulties related to generalizability, source data quality, complexity of models and integration of content and technical knowledge were discussed.ConclusionsThe use of narrative text for injury surveillance has grown in popularity, complexity and quality over recent years. With advances in data mining techniques, increased capacity for analysis of large databases, and involvement of computer scientists in the injury prevention field, along with more comprehensive use and description of quality assurance methods in text mining approaches, it is likely that we will see a continued growth and advancement in knowledge of text mining in the injury field.Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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