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Presenting Terrorizer : an algorithm for consolidating company names in patent assignees
Language
EN
Document de travail - Pré-publication
English Abstract
The problem of disambiguation of company names poses a significant challenge in extracting useful information from patents. This issue biases research outcomes as it mostly underesti mates the number of patents attributed ...Read more >
The problem of disambiguation of company names poses a significant challenge in extracting useful information from patents. This issue biases research outcomes as it mostly underesti mates the number of patents attributed to companies, particularly multinational corporations
which file patents under a plethora of names, including alternate spellings of the same en tity and, eventually, companies’ subsidiaries.To date, addressing these challenges has relied on labor-intensive dictionary based or string matching approaches, leaving the problem of patents’ assignee harmonization on large datasets mostly unresolved. To bridge this gap, this paper describes the Terrorizer algorithm, a text-based algorithm that leverages natural language processing (NLP), network theory, and rule-based techniques to harmonize the vari ants of company names recorded as patent assignees. In particular, the algorithm follows the tripartite structure of its antecedents, namely parsing, matching and filtering stage, adding
an original ”knowledge augmentation” phase which is used to enrich the information available on each assignee name. We use Terrorizer on a set of 325’917 companies’ names who are as signees of patents granted by the USPTO from 2005 to 2022. The performance of Terrorizer is evaluated on four gold standard datasets. This validation step shows us two main things: the first is that the performance of Terrorizer is similar over different kind of datasets, prov ing that our algorithm generalizes well. Second, when comparing its performance with the one of the algorithm currently used in PatentsView for the same task (Monath et al., 2021), it achieves a higher F1 score. Finally, we use the Tree-structured Parzen Estimator (TPE) optimization algorithm for the hyperparameters’ tuning. Our final result is a reduction in the initial set of names of over 42%.Read less <
English Keywords
Entity linking
Patent assignee
Natural language processing
Network theory