.. crate_anon/docs/source/nlp/crate_python_regex.rst .. Copyright (C) 2015, University of Cambridge, Department of Psychiatry. Created by Rudolf Cardinal (rnc1001@cam.ac.uk). . This file is part of CRATE. . CRATE is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. . CRATE is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. . You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with CRATE. If not, see . .. _regex_nlp: CRATE's Python regex NLP ------------------------ CRATE provides several simple numerical results processors. All are in English unless specified. Each comes with a corresponding *validator*. **Processor** The processor looks for full results in text, like “his **CRP is 10 mg/L today**” or “**CRP | (H) | 17**”, and will extract the number, units, and so forth. It does so by matching a keyword (such as “CRP”, “C-reactive protein”, “C reactive protein”, etc.) plus other attributes such as an optional tense indicator (“is”, “was”), an optional relationship (“equals”, “<”, etc.), a value, and units. Units may be optional, and some units may be recognized and specifically disallowed. For example, “MMSE 25/30” or “MMSE 25 out of 30” may be allowed, where variants on “out of 30” are the units, and “MMSE 25” can be treated as if it were implicitly out of 30, but “MMSE 25/29” disallowed. The processor produces the :ref:`standard NLP output columns `, and also these output columns: =============== =============== =============================================== Column SQL type Description =============== =============== =============================================== variable_name VARCHAR(64) Variable name (e.g. ‘CRP’) _content TEXT Matching text contents _start INT Start position (of matching string within whole text) _end INT End position (of matching string within whole text) variable_text TEXT Text that matched the variable name (e.g. ‘CRP’, ‘C-reactive protein’). relation_text VARCHAR(50) Text that matched the mathematical relationship between variable and value (e.g. ‘=’, ‘equals’, ‘less than’) relation VARCHAR(2) Standardized mathematical relationship between variable and value (e.g. ‘=’, ‘<=’) value_text VARCHAR(50) Matched numerical value, as text units VARCHAR(50) Matched units, as text value_mg_l (\*) FLOAT Numerical value in preferred units, if known tense_text VARCHAR(50) Tense text, if known (e.g. ‘is’, ‘was’) tense VARCHAR(7) Calculated tense, if known (e.g. ‘past’, ‘present’) =============== =============== =============================================== … plus any fields you elected to copy. The name of the column marked (*) will vary from processor to processor (e.g. ``value_mg_l`` for the CRP processor; ``value_kg`` for the Weight processor; ``value_m`` for the Height processor). The columns may vary from processor to processor; for example, the blood pressure (BP) processor produces two numbers per entry (a systolic and a diastolic BP). **Validator** The validator simply looks for the corresponding keyword. It doesn’t record much information except for a reference to the source row. The validator produces the :ref:`standard NLP output columns `, and typically these output columns: =============== =============== =============================================== Column SQL type Description =============== =============== =============================================== variable_name VARCHAR(64) Variable name (e.g. ‘CRP’) _content TEXT Matching text contents _start INT Start position (of matching string within whole text) _end INT End position (of matching string within whole text) =============== =============== =============================================== … plus any fields you elected to copy. To look at things the validator recognized but the processor didn’t like, you can do something like the following. This example was created for a database with string source PKs (yuk) on Microsoft SQL Server (which sometimes requires a slightly convoluted way of specifying table names). .. code-block:: none SELECT text -- field with the free text in FROM crissql_v3.dbo.Progress_Notes -- source table WHERE document_id IN ( -- primary key SELECT _srcpkstr FROM crissql_workspace.[CRIS-CPFT\RCardinal].validate_crp WHERE _srctable = 'Progress_Notes' -- source table ) AND document_id NOT IN ( SELECT _srcpkstr FROM crissql_workspace.[CRIS-CPFT\RCardinal].crp WHERE _srctable = 'Progress_Notes' -- source table ) This should produce text where CRP is mentioned but no value given, such as “FBC, TSH, vitamin B12, CRP and eGFR are all within normal range”; “blood sample taken (CRP/U&Es and FBC)”; “monitoring CK and CRP”; “CRP was back up yesterday”. For a table with integer PKs you would use ``_srcpkval`` instead of ``_srcpkstr``. Here's an example, again using SQL Server: .. code-block:: none SELECT [text] -- field with the free text in FROM RiO.dbo.Progress_Notes -- source table WHERE crate_pk IN ( -- primary key SELECT _srcpkval FROM RiONLP.dbo.validate_crp WHERE _srctable = 'Progress_Notes' -- source table ) AND crate_pk NOT IN ( SELECT _srcpkval FROM RiONLP.dbo.crp WHERE _srctable = 'Progress_Notes' -- source table ) **Specimen timing on a slow system (2016-11-15):** 5,954 seconds (1h40) for a full run of 2,717,779 text notes (one per database row, from a table with a string PK) through 40 NLP tasks (20 main, 20 validator) on a virtual computer mimicking 2×2.7GHz CPUs running Windows Server 2003, with all databases under SQL Server hosted elsewhere over a network. That works out at 18.2 kHz for processor-notes or 456 Hz for notes. (The corresponding do-nothing incremental update, with the --skipdelete option, took 4,756 s. That’s not much faster, and was limited primarily by queries for a record indicating that each datum had previously been processed. The advantage of incremental updates can be considerably more than this if the NLP step is slow, as with GATE and other more complex systems, but regular expressions are pretty quick.) Fast computers with local networks and SSD storage should perform considerably better, and tables with integer PKs are also processed faster because their work can be more efficiently and evenly assigned to parallel processes. **Current processors** Use the ``crate_nlp --listprocessors`` or ``crate_nlp --describeprocessors`` commands to show these (see :ref:`Current NLP processors `). Those not marked "EXTERNAL" are CRATE Python NLP processors. *Not all have been formally validated.* .. _crate_run_crate_nlp_demo: **Testing the NLP** You can test these built-in NLP tools quickly via the command line: .. literalinclude:: _crate_run_crate_nlp_demo.txt :language: none Note also that you can test any NLP processor via a config file; see :ref:`testing NLP `.