pretty_name: XML-parsed PMC
task_categories:
- text-classification
- summarization
- other
annotations_creators:
- no-annotation
language_creators:
- expert-generated
language:
- en
size_categories:
- 1M<n<10M
source_datasets:
- original
license:
- cc0-1.0
- cc-by-4.0
- cc-by-sa-4.0
- cc-by-nc-4.0
- cc-by-nd-4.0
- cc-by-nc-nd-4.0
- cc-by-nc-sa-4.0
- unknown
- other
multilinguality:
- monolingual
task_ids: []
tags:
- research papers
- biology
- medecine
Dataset Card for PMC Open Access XML
Table of Contents
- Dataset Description
- Dataset Structure
- Dataset Creation
- Considerations for Using the Data
- Additional Information
Dataset Description
- Homepage: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/tools/openftlist/
- Repository: [Needs More Information]
- Paper: [Needs More Information]
- Leaderboard: [Needs More Information]
- Point of Contact: [Needs More Information]
Dataset Summary
The XML Open Access includes more than 3.4 million journal articles and preprints that are made available under license terms that allow reuse. Not all articles in PMC are available for text mining and other reuse, many have copyright protection, however articles in the PMC Open Access Subset are made available under Creative Commons or similar licenses that generally allow more liberal redistribution and reuse than a traditional copyrighted work. The PMC Open Access Subset is one part of the PMC Article Datasets
This version takes XML version as source, benefiting from the structured text to split the articles in parts, naming the introduction, methods, results, discussion and conclusion, and refers with keywords in the text to external or internal resources (articles, figures, tables, formulas, boxed-text, quotes, code, footnotes, chemicals, graphics, medias).
The dataset was initially created with relation-extraction tasks in mind, between the references in text and the content of the references (e.g. for PMID, by joining the refered article abstract from the pubmed dataset), but aims in a larger extent to provide a corpus of pre-annotated text for other tasks (e.g. figure caption to graphic, glossary definition detection, summarization).
Supported Tasks and Leaderboards
[Needs More Information]
Languages
[Needs More Information]
Dataset Structure
Data Fields
"accession_id": The PMC ID of the article
"pmid": The PubMed ID of the article
"introduction": List of <title> and <p> elements in <body>, sharing their root with a <title> containing "introduction" or "background".
"methods": Same as introduction with "method" keyword.
"results": Same as introduction with "result" keyword.
"discussion": Same as introduction with "discussion" keyword.
"conclusion": Same as introduction with "conclusion" keyword.
"front": List of <title> and <p> elements in <front> after everything else has been searched.
"body": List of <title> and <p> elements in <body> after everything else has been searched.
"back": List of <title> and <p> elements in <back> after everything else has been searched.
"figure": List of <fig> elements of the article.
"table": List of <table-wrap> and <array> elements of the article.
"formula": List of <disp-formula> and <inline-formula> elements of the article.
"box": List of <boxed-text> elements of the article.
"code": List of <code> elements of the article.
"quote": List of <disp-quote> and <speech> elements of the article.
"chem": List of <chem-struct-wrap> elements of the article.
"supplementary": List of <supplementary-material> and <inline-supplementary-material> elements of the article.
"footnote": List of <fn-group> and <table-wrap-foot> elements of the article.
"graphic": List of <graphic> and <inline-graphic> elements of the article.
"media": List of <media> and <inline-media> elements of the article.
"references": Lists of references in the order found in the corresponding categories
- "pmid_ref": PMIDs of other articles. In text, replaced by " ##REF## "
- "unknown_pub_ref": 0-indexed idx of the article in "unknown_pub". In text, replaced by " ##UREF## "
- "figure_ref": 0-indexed idx of the figures in "figure" In text, replaced by " ##FIG## "
- "table_ref": 0-indexed idx of the tables in "table" In text, replaced by " ##TAB## "
- "formula_ref": 0-indexed idx of the formulas in "formula" In text, replaced by " ##FORMU## "
- "box_ref": 0-indexed idx of the box in "box" In text, replaced by " ##BOX## "
- "code_ref": 0-indexed idx of the code in "code" In text, replaced by " ##CODE## "
- "quote_ref": 0-indexed idx of the quote in "quote" In text, replaced by " ##QUOTE## "
- "chem_ref": 0-indexed idx of the chemical in "chem" In text, replaced by " ##CHEM## "
- "supplementary_ref": 0-indexed idx of the figure in "supplementary" In text, replaced by " ##SUPPL## "
- "footnote_ref": 0-indexed idx of the footnote in "footnote" In text, replaced by " ##FOOTN## "
- "graphic_ref": 0-indexed idx of the graphics in "graphics" In text, replaced by " ##GRAPH## "
- "media_ref": 0-indexed idx of the medias in "medias" In text, replaced by " ##MEDIA## "
"references_text": For each reference in "references", the corresponding text that the reference keywords replaced.
"glossary": Glossary if found in the XML
"unknown_references": JSON of a dictionnary of each "tag":"text" for the reference that did not indicate a PMID
"n_references": Total number of references and unknown references
"license": The licence of the article
"retracted": If the article was retracted or not
"last_updated": Last update of the article
"citation": Citation of the article
"package_file": path to the folder containing the graphics and media files of the article (to append to the base URL: ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/pmc/)
Data Splits
[Needs More Information]
Dataset Creation
Curation Rationale
Internal references (figures, tables, ...) were found using specific tags. Deciding on those tags was done by testing and by looking in the documentation for the different kind of possible usage. Then, to split the article into introduction, methods, results, discussion and conclusion, specific keywords in titles were used. Because there are no rules in this xml to tag those sections, finding the keyword seemed like the most reliable approach to do so. A drawback is that many section do not have those keywords in the titles but could be assimilated to those. However, the huge diversity in the titles makes it harder to label such sections. This could be the work of further versions of this dataset.
Source Data
Initial Data Collection and Normalization
Data was obtained from:
- ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/pmc/oa_bulk/oa_noncomm/xml/
- ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/pmc/oa_bulk/oa_comm/xml/
- ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/pmc/oa_bulk/oa_other/xml/
Additional content for individual articles (graphics, media) can be obtained from:
- ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/pmc + "package_file"
Who are the source language producers?
[Needs More Information]
Annotations
Annotation process
[Needs More Information]
Who are the annotators?
[Needs More Information]
Personal and Sensitive Information
[Needs More Information]
Considerations for Using the Data
Social Impact of Dataset
[Needs More Information]
Discussion of Biases
The articles XML are similar accross collections. This means that if a certain collection handles the structure in unusual ways, the whole collection might not be as well annotated than others. This concerns all the sections (intro, methods, ...), the external references (pmids) and the internal references (tables, figures, ...). To illustrate that, references are sometime given as a range (e.g. 10-15). In that case, only reference 10 and 15 are linked. This could potentially be handled in a future version.
Other Known Limitations
[Needs More Information]
Preprocessing advices
- Filter out empty contents.
- Remove unwanted references from the text, and replace either by the "references_text" or by the reference content itself.
- Unescape HTML special characters:
import html; html.unescape(my_text)
- Remove superfluous line break in text.
- Remove XML tags / replace by special tokens (<italic>, <sup>, <sub>, ...).
- Join the items of the contents' lists.
Additional Information
Dataset Curators
[Needs More Information]
Licensing Information
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/about/copyright/
Within the PMC Open Access Subset, there are three groupings:
Commercial Use Allowed - CC0, CC BY, CC BY-SA, CC BY-ND licenses Non-Commercial Use Only - CC BY-NC, CC BY-NC-SA, CC BY-NC-ND licenses; and Other - no machine-readable Creative Commons license, no license, or a custom license.
Citation Information
[Needs More Information]