CTAKES
Developer(s) | Children's Hospital Boston, Mayo Clinic |
---|---|
Stable release |
3.2.1
/ December 10, 2014 |
Written in | Java |
Operating system | Cross-platform |
Type | Text mining, Information Extraction, Natural language processing |
License | Apache License 2.0 |
Website | http://ctakes.apache.org/ |
Apache cTAKES: clinical Text Analysis and Knowledge Extraction System is an open-source natural language processing system for information extraction from electronic medical record clinical free-text. It processes clinical notes, identifying types of clinical named entities — drugs, diseases/disorders, signs/symptoms, anatomical sites and procedures. Each named entity has attributes for the text span, the ontology mapping code, context (family history of, current, unrelated to patient), and negated/not negated.
cTAKES was built using the UIMA Unstructured Information Management Architecture framework and OpenNLP natural language processing toolkit. Its components are specifically trained for the clinical domain, and create rich linguistic and semantic annotations that can be utilized by clinical decision support systems and clinical research.
These components include:
- Sentence boundary detector
- Rule-based tokenizer to separate punctuations from words
- Normalizer
- Context dependent tokenizer
- Part-of-speech tagger
- Phrasal chunker
- Dictionary lookup annotator
- Context annotator
- Negation detector
- Dependency parser
- Module for the identification of patient smoking status
- Drug mention annotator
History
The development of cTAKES started in 2006 by a team of physicians, computer scientists and software engineers at the Mayo Clinic. The development team was led by Dr. Guergana Savova & Dr. Christopher Chute. This system was deployed at Mayo and is currently an integral part of their clinical data management infrastructure and has processed in excess of 80 million clinical notes.
Currently, the core development team is co-located at Mayo Clinic and Children's Hospital Boston following Dr. Savova's move to Children's Hospital Boston in early 2010. Additional collaborations with external groups at University of Colorado, Brandeis University, University of Pittsburgh, University of California at San Diego continue to extend the capabilities of cTAKES into areas such Temporal Reasoning, Clinical Question Answering, and coreference resolution for the clinical domain.
In 2010, cTAKES was adopted by the i2b2 program and is a central component of the SHARPn Area 4
In 2013, cTAKES released their first release as an Apache incubator project: cTAKES 3.0
In March 2013, cTAKES has graduated to an Apache Top Level Project (TLP)
See also
External links
- cTAKES Official Website
- Abstract (JAMIA)
- Open Health Natural Language Processing (OHNLP) Consortium
- Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Projects (SHARP) Program
- SHARP Area 4 - Secondary Use of EHR Data
- The Automated Retrieval Console (ARC)
- Informatics for Integrating Biology and the Bedside