A variety of detailed data about geological topics and geoscience knowledge are buried in the geoscience literature and rarely used. Named entity recognition (NER) provides both opportunities and challenges to leverage this wealth of data in the geoscience literature for data analysis and further information extraction. Existing NER models and techniques are mainly based on rule‐based and supervised approaches, and developing such systems requires a costly manual effort. In this paper, we first design a generic stepwise framework for domain‐specific NER. Following this framework, domain‐specific entities and domain‐general words are collected and selected as seed terms. Normalization and grouping processes are then applied to these seed terms for further analysis. A random extraction algorithm based on a unigram language model is used to generate a large‐scale training data set consisting of probabilistically labeled pseudosentences. Each generated sentence is then used as input to the self‐training and learning algorithm. Experimental results on two constructed data sets demonstrate that the proposed model effectively recognizes and identifies geological named entities.
is used to capture the abundant word level features, grammatical structure features and semantic features in sentences. The self-learning strategy assisted by domain knowledge can automatically construct the domain training corpus without manual intervention. A set of experiments to verify the effectiveness of the proposed method on an available manually constructed hybrid dataset.
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