The changing landscape of text mining: a review of approaches for ecology and evolution.

Journal: Proceedings. Biological sciences
PMID:

Abstract

In ecology and evolutionary biology, the synthesis and modelling of data from published literature are commonly used to generate insights and test theories across systems. However, the tasks of searching, screening, and extracting data from literature are often arduous. Researchers may manually process hundreds to thousands of articles for systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and compiling synthetic datasets. As relevant articles expand to tens or hundreds of thousands, computer-based approaches can increase the efficiency, transparency and reproducibility of literature-based research. Methods available for text mining are rapidly changing owing to developments in machine learning-based language models. We review the growing landscape of approaches, mapping them onto three broad paradigms (frequency-based approaches, traditional Natural Language Processing and deep learning-based language models). This serves as an entry point to learn foundational and cutting-edge concepts, vocabularies, and methods to foster integration of these tools into ecological and evolutionary research. We cover approaches for modelling ecological texts, generating training data, developing custom models and interacting with large language models and discuss challenges and possible solutions to implementing these methods in ecology and evolution.

Authors

  • Maxwell J Farrell
    Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
  • Nicolas Le Guillarme
    Université Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, LECA, Laboratoire d'Ecologie Alpine, Grenoble, France.
  • Liam Brierley
    Department of Health Data Science, University of Liverpool, Brownlow Street, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
  • Bronwen Hunter
    School of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK.
  • Daan Scheepens
    Division of Biosciences, University College London, London, UK.
  • Anna Willoughby
    Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA.
  • Andrew Yates
    University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
  • Nicole Mideo
    Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.