Ipek Ensari

2papers

2 Papers

CLOct 31, 2023
Keyword-optimized Template Insertion for Clinical Information Extraction via Prompt-based Learning

Eugenia Alleva, Isotta Landi, Leslee J Shaw et al.

Clinical note classification is a common clinical NLP task. However, annotated data-sets are scarse. Prompt-based learning has recently emerged as an effective method to adapt pre-trained models for text classification using only few training examples. A critical component of prompt design is the definition of the template (i.e. prompt text). The effect of template position, however, has been insufficiently investigated. This seems particularly important in the clinical setting, where task-relevant information is usually sparse in clinical notes. In this study we develop a keyword-optimized template insertion method (KOTI) and show how optimizing position can improve performance on several clinical tasks in a zero-shot and few-shot training setting.

LGSep 25, 2023
Designing and evaluating an online reinforcement learning agent for physical exercise recommendations in N-of-1 trials

Dominik Meier, Ipek Ensari, Stefan Konigorski

Personalized adaptive interventions offer the opportunity to increase patient benefits, however, there are challenges in their planning and implementation. Once implemented, it is an important question whether personalized adaptive interventions are indeed clinically more effective compared to a fixed gold standard intervention. In this paper, we present an innovative N-of-1 trial study design testing whether implementing a personalized intervention by an online reinforcement learning agent is feasible and effective. Throughout, we use a new study on physical exercise recommendations to reduce pain in endometriosis for illustration. We describe the design of a contextual bandit recommendation agent and evaluate the agent in simulation studies. The results show that, first, implementing a personalized intervention by an online reinforcement learning agent is feasible. Second, such adaptive interventions have the potential to improve patients' benefits even if only few observations are available. As one challenge, they add complexity to the design and implementation process. In order to quantify the expected benefit, data from previous interventional studies is required. We expect our approach to be transferable to other interventions and clinical interventions.