Author name disambiguation
Author name disambiguation is a type of disambiguation and record linkage applied to the names of individual people. The process could, for example, distinguish individuals with the name "John Smith".
An editor may apply the process to scholarly documents where the goal is to find all mentions of the same author and cluster them together. Authors of scholarly documents often share names which makes it hard to distinguish each author's work. Hence, author name disambiguation aims to find all publications that belong to a given author and distinguish them from publications of other authors who share the same name.
Methods
Considerable research has been conducted to do disambiguation.[1][2][3][4] Typical approaches for author name disambiguation rely on information about the authors such as their affiliations, email addresses, year of publication, co-authors, topic information to distinguish between authors. This information can be used to train a machine learning classifier to decide whether two author mentions refer to the same author or not.[5] Many research works regard name disambiguation as a clustering problem, i.e., partitioning documents into some clusters, where each represents an author.[1][6][7] Others regard it as a classification problem.[8] Some works construct document graph and utilize the graph topology to learn document similarity.[7][9] Recently, several research works [9][10] aim to learn low-dimensional document representation by employing network embedding methods.[11][12]
Applications
There are multiple reasons that cause author names to be ambiguous, among which: individuals may publish under multiple names for a variety of reasons including different transliteration, misspelling, name change due to marriage, or the use of nicknames or middle names and initials.[13]
Motivations for disambiguating individuals include identifying inventors from patents.[14] Name disambiguation is also a cornerstone in author-centric academic search and mining systems, such as ArnetMiner (also AMiner) .[15]
Similar issues
Author name disambiguation is only one record linkage problem in the scholarly data domain. Closely related, and potentially mutually beneficial problems include: organisation (affiliation) disambiguation,[16] as well as conference or publication venue disambiguation, since data publishers often use different names or aliases for these entities.
Resources
Several well-known benchmarks to evaluate author name disambiguation are listed below, each of which provides publications with some ambiguous names and their ground truths.
- AMiner name disambiguation dataset
- CiteSeerX name disambiguation dataset
- Semantic Scholar Author Name Disambiguation (S2AND) dataset[17]
Source Codes
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Khabsa, Madian; Treeratpituk, Pucktada; Giles, C. Lee (2015). Proceedings of the 15th ACM/IEEE-CE on Joint Conference on Digital Libraries - JCDL '15. pp. 37–46. doi:10.1145/2756406.2756915. ISBN 9781450335942.
- ↑ Mann, Gideon S.; Yarowsky, David (2003). "Unsupervised personal name disambiguation". Proceedings of the seventh conference on Natural language learning at HLT-NAACL 2003 -. 4. pp. 33–40. doi:10.3115/1119176.1119181.
- ↑ Han, Hui; Giles, Lee; Zha, Hongyuan; Li, Cheng; Tsioutsiouliklis, Kostas (2004). "Two supervised learning approaches for name disambiguation in author citations". Proceedings of the 2004 joint ACM/IEEE conference on Digital libraries - JCDL '04. pp. 296. doi:10.1145/996350.996419. ISBN 1581138326.
- ↑ Huang, Jian; Ertekin, Seyda; Giles, C. Lee (2006). Knowledge Discovery in Databases: PKDD 2006. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. 4213. pp. 536–544. doi:10.1007/11871637_53. ISBN 978-3-540-45374-1.
- ↑ "Disambiguating authors in academic publications using random forests". Proceedings of the 9th ACM/IEEE-CS Joint Conference on Digital Libraries. ACM. 2009. pp. 39–48. doi:10.1145/1555400.1555408. https://clgiles.ist.psu.edu/papers/JCDL2009-random-forests-disambiguation.pdf.
- ↑ Jie Tang; A.C.M. Fong; Bo Wang; Jing Zhang (2012). "A Unified Probabilistic Framework for Name Disambiguation in Digital Library". IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering (IEEE) 24 (6): 975–987. doi:10.1109/TKDE.2011.13.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Xuezhi Wang; Jie Tang; Hong Cheng; Philip S. Yu (2011). "ADANA: Active Name Disambiguation.". Vancouver: IEEE. 794–803. doi:10.1109/ICDM.2011.19. ISBN 978-1-4577-2075-8.
- ↑ Zeyd Boukhers; Nagaraj Bahubali Asundi (2022). "Whois? Deep Author Name Disambiguation Using Bibliographic Data". Linking Theory and Practice of Digital Libraries. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. 13541. Padua: Springer. pp. 201–215. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-16802-4_16. ISBN 978-3-031-16801-7.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 Yutao Zhang; Fanjin Zhang; Peiran Yao; Jie Tang (2018). "Name Disambiguation in AMiner: Clustering, Maintenance, and Human in the Loop". London: ACM. 1002–1011. https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=3219859.
- ↑ Baichuan Zhang; Mohammad Al Hasan (2017). "Name disambiguation in anonymized graphs using network embedding.". Singapore: ACM. 1239–1248. https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=3132873.
- ↑ Bryan Perozzi; Rami Al-Rfou; Steven Skiena (2014). "Deepwalk: Online learning of social representations.". New York: ACM. 701–710. https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2623732.
- ↑ Jiezhong Qiu; Yuxiao Dong; Hao Ma; Jian Li; Kuansan Wang; Jie Tang (2018). "Network Embedding as Matrix Factorization: Unifying DeepWalk, LINE, PTE, and node2vec.". Marina Del Rey: ACM. 459–467. https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=3159706.
- ↑ Smalheiser, Neil R.; Torvik, Vetle I. (2009). "Author name disambiguation". Annual Review of Information Science and Technology 43: 1–43. doi:10.1002/aris.2009.1440430113.
- ↑ Morrison, Greg; Riccaboni, Massimo; Pammolli, Fabio (16 May 2017). "Disambiguation of patent inventors and assignees using high-resolution geolocation data". Scientific Data 4: 170064. doi:10.1038/sdata.2017.64. PMID 28509897. Bibcode: 2017NatSD...470064M.
- ↑ Jie Tang; Jing Zhang; Limin Yao; Juanzi Li; Li Zhang; Zhong Su (2008). "ArnetMiner: extraction and mining of academic social networks". New York: ACM. 990–998. http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1401890.1402008.
- ↑ "Entity Deduplication on ScholarlyData". Proceedings of the Extended Semantic Web Conference. Springer-Verlag. 2017. pp. 85–100. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-58068-5_6.
- ↑ Subramanian, Shivashankar; King, Daniel; Downey, Doug; Feldman, Sergey (21 Mar 2021). "S2AND: A Benchmark and Evaluation System for Author Name Disambiguation". arXiv:2103.07534 [cs.DL].
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Author name disambiguation.
Read more |