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author | Bryan Newbold <bnewbold@robocracy.org> | 2020-08-12 10:10:20 -0700 |
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committer | Bryan Newbold <bnewbold@robocracy.org> | 2020-10-15 20:23:12 -0700 |
commit | a7765fb8b6011c224dc1e4d7b0e30159bae7a903 (patch) | |
tree | 1c6ff67488a7156277b2d4cb710e637fcb630633 /proposals/202008_bulk_citation_graph.md | |
parent | 27ed76790da722f078e51c46b1751df089968e4c (diff) | |
download | fatcat-a7765fb8b6011c224dc1e4d7b0e30159bae7a903.tar.gz fatcat-a7765fb8b6011c224dc1e4d7b0e30159bae7a903.zip |
bulk citation graph workflow proposal
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diff --git a/proposals/202008_bulk_citation_graph.md b/proposals/202008_bulk_citation_graph.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000..f8868e45 --- /dev/null +++ b/proposals/202008_bulk_citation_graph.md @@ -0,0 +1,160 @@ + +status: brainstorm + + +This is one design proposal for how to scale up citation graph potential-match +generation, as well as for doing fuzzy matching of other types at scale (eg, +self-matches to group works within fatcat). Not proposiing that we have to do +things this way, this is just one possible option. + +This current proposal has the following assumptions: + +- 100-200 million "target" works +- 1-3 billion structured references to match +- references mostly coming from GROBID, Crossref, and PUBMED +- paper-like works (could include books; references to web pages etc to be + handled separately) +- static snapshots are sufficient +- python fuzzy match code works and is performant enough to verify matches + within small buckets/pools + +Additional major "source" and "target" works to think about: + +- wikipedia articles as special "source" works. should work fine with this + system. also most wikipedia paper references already have persistent + identifiers +- webpages as special "target" works, where we would want to do a CDX lookup or + something. normalize URL (SURT?) to generate reverse index ("all works citing + a given URL") +- openlibrary books as "target" works. also should work fine with this system + +The high-level prosposal is: + +- transform and normalize basic metadata for both citations and reference (eg, + sufficient fields for fuzzy verification), and store only this minimal subset +- as a first pass, if external identifiers exist in the "source" reference set, + do lookups against fatcat API and verify match on any resulting hits. remove + these "source" matches from the next stages. +- generate one or more fixed-size hash identifiers (~64 bit) for each citation + and target, and use these as a key to bucket works. this would not be hashes + over the entire record metadata, only small subsets +- sort the "target" works into an index for self-grouping, lookups, and + iteration. each record may appear multiple times if there are multiple hash + types +- sort the "source" references into an index and run a merge-sort on bucket + keys against the "target" index to generate candidate match buckets +- run python fuzzy match code against the candidate buckets, outputing a status + for each reference input and a list of all strong matches +- resort successful matches and index by both source and target identifiers as + output citation graph + +## Record Schema + +Imaginging a subset of fatcat release entity fields, perhaps stored in a binary +format like protobuf for size efficiency. Or a SQL table or columnar +datastore. If we used JSON we would want to use short key names to reduce key +storage overhead. Total data set size will impact performance because of disk +I/O, caching, etc. I think this may hold even with on-disk compression? + +Would do a pass of normalization ahead of time, like aggressive string +cleaning, so we don't need to do this per-fuzzy-verify attempt. + +Metadata subset might include: + +- `title` +- `subtitle` +- `authors` (surnames? structured/full names? original/alternate/aliases?) +- `year` +- `container_name` (and abbreviation?) +- `volume`, `issue`, `pages` +- `doi`, `pmid`, `arxiv_id` (only ext ids used in citations?) +- `release_ident` (source or target) +- `work_ident` (source or target) +- `release_stage` (target only?) +- `release_type` (target only?) + +Plus any other fields helpful in fuzzy verification. + +These records can be transformed into python release entities with partial +metadata, then passed to the existing fuzzy verification code path. + +## Hashing Schemes + +Hashing schemes could be flexible. Multiple could be used at the same time, and +we can change schemes over time. Each record could be transformed to one or +more hashes. Ideally we could use the top couple bits of the hash to indicate +the hash type. + +An initial proposal would be to use first and last N tokens of just the title. +In this scheme would normalize and tokenize the title, remove a few stopwords +(eg, tokens sometimes omitted in citation or indexing). If the title is shorter +than 3 tokens pad with blank tokens. Perhaps do a filter here against +inordinately popular titles or other bad data. Then use some fast hash +non-cryptographic hash with fixed size output (64-bits). Do this for both the +first and last three tokens; set the top bit to "0" for hash of the first three +tokens, or "1" for the hash of the last three tokens. Emit two key/value rows +(eg, TSV?), with the same values but different hashes. + +Alternatively, in SQL, index a single row on the two different hash types. + +Possible alternative hash variations we could experiment with: + +- take the first 10 normalized characters, removing whitespace, and hash that +- include first 3 title tokens, then 1 token of the first author's surname +- normalize and hash entire title +- concatenate subtitle to title or not + +Two advantages of hashing are: + +- we can shard/partition based on the key. this would not be the case if the + keys were raw natural language tokens +- advantages from fixed-size datatypes (eg, uint64) + +## Bulk Joining + +"Target" index could include all hash types in a single index. "Source" index +in bulk mode could be either all hash types concatenated together and run +together, then re-sort and uniq the output (eg, by release-to-release pairings) +to remove dupes. In many cases this would have the overhead of computing the +fuzzy verification multiple times redundantly (but only a small fixed maximum +number of duplicates). Alternatively, with greater pipeline complexity, could +do an initial match on one hash type, then attempt matching (eg, recompute and +sort and join) for the other hash types only for those which did not match. + +## Citation Graph Index Output + +Imagining successful match rows to look like: + +- `match_status` (eg, strong/weak) +- `source_release_ident` +- `source_release_stage` +- `ref_key` (optional? or `ref_index`?) +- `source_work_ident` +- `target_release_ident` +- `target_release_stage` +- `target_work_ident` + +Would run a sort/uniq on `(source_release_ident,target_release_ident)`. + +Could filter by stages, then sort/uniq work-to-work counts to generate simple +inbound citation counts for each target work. + +Could sort `target_work_ident` and generate groups of inbound works ("best +release per work") citing that work. Then do fast key lookups to show +"works/releases citing this work/release". + +## To Be Decided + +- bulk datastore/schema: just TSV files sorted by key column? if protobuf, how + to encode? what about SQL? parquet/arrow? +- what datastores would allow fast merge sorts? do SQL engines (parquet) + actually do this? +- would we need to make changes to be more compatible with something like + opencitations? Eg, I think they want DOI-to-DOI citations; having to look + those up again from fatcat API would be slow +- should we do this in a large distributed system like spark (maybe pyspark for + fuzzy verification) or stick to simple UNIX/CLI tools? +- wikipedia articles as sources? +- openlibrary identifiers? +- archive.org as additional identifiers? + |