The NIH Big Data to Knowledge (BD2K) initiative.
Author(s): Bourne, Philip E, Bonazzi, Vivien, Dunn, Michelle, Green, Eric D, Guyer, Mark, Komatsoulis, George, Larkin, Jennie, Russell, Beth
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv136
Author(s): Bourne, Philip E, Bonazzi, Vivien, Dunn, Michelle, Green, Eric D, Guyer, Mark, Komatsoulis, George, Larkin, Jennie, Russell, Beth
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv136
Adverse drug events (ADEs) are undesired harmful effects resulting from use of a medication, and occur in 30% of hospitalized patients. The authors have developed a data-mining method for systematic, automated detection of ADEs from electronic medical records.
Author(s): Wang, Guan, Jung, Kenneth, Winnenburg, Rainer, Shah, Nigam H
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv102
The world's genomics data will never be stored in a single repository - rather, it will be distributed among many sites in many countries. No one site will have enough data to explain genotype to phenotype relationships in rare diseases; therefore, sites must share data. To accomplish this, the genetics community must forge common standards and protocols to make sharing and computing data among many sites a seamless activity. Through [...]
Author(s): Paten, Benedict, Diekhans, Mark, Druker, Brian J, Friend, Stephen, Guinney, Justin, Gassner, Nadine, Guttman, Mitchell, Kent, W James, Mantey, Patrick, Margolin, Adam A, Massie, Matt, Novak, Adam M, Nothaft, Frank, Pachter, Lior, Patterson, David, Smuga-Otto, Maciej, Stuart, Joshua M, Van't Veer, Laura, Wold, Barbara, Haussler, David
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv047
Biomedical Informatics is a growing interdisciplinary field in which research topics and citation trends have been evolving rapidly in recent years. To analyze these data in a fast, reproducible manner, automation of certain processes is needed. JAMIA is a "generalist" journal for biomedical informatics. Its articles reflect the wide range of topics in informatics. In this study, we retrieved Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) terms and citations of JAMIA articles published [...]
Author(s): Han, Dong, Wang, Shuang, Jiang, Chao, Jiang, Xiaoqian, Kim, Hyeon-Eui, Sun, Jimeng, Ohno-Machado, Lucila
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv157
Medication-indication information is a key part of the information needed for providing decision support for and promoting appropriate use of medications. However, this information is not readily available to end users, and a lot of the resources only contain this information in unstructured form (free text). A number of public knowledge bases (KBs) containing structured medication-indication information have been developed over the years, but a direct comparison of these resources [...]
Author(s): Salmasian, Hojjat, Tran, Tran H, Chase, Herbert S, Friedman, Carol
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv129
Clinical decision support (CDS) is essential for delivery of high-quality, cost-effective, and safe healthcare. The authors sought to evaluate the CDS capabilities across electronic health record (EHR) systems.
Author(s): McCoy, Allison B, Wright, Adam, Sittig, Dean F
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv073
Automatically identifying specific phenotypes in free-text clinical notes is critically important for the reuse of clinical data. In this study, the authors combine expert-guided feature (text) selection with one-class classification for text processing.
Author(s): Joffe, Erel, Pettigrew, Emily J, Herskovic, Jorge R, Bearden, Charles F, Bernstam, Elmer V
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv010
An individual's birth month has a significant impact on the diseases they develop during their lifetime. Previous studies reveal relationships between birth month and several diseases including atherothrombosis, asthma, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and myopia, leaving most diseases completely unexplored. This retrospective population study systematically explores the relationship between seasonal affects at birth and lifetime disease risk for 1688 conditions.
Author(s): Boland, Mary Regina, Shahn, Zachary, Madigan, David, Hripcsak, George, Tatonetti, Nicholas P
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv046
To create a multilingual gold-standard corpus for biomedical concept recognition.
Author(s): Kors, Jan A, Clematide, Simon, Akhondi, Saber A, van Mulligen, Erik M, Rebholz-Schuhmann, Dietrich
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv037
To improve the normalization of relative and incomplete temporal expressions (RI-TIMEXes) in clinical narratives.
Author(s): Sun, Weiyi, Rumshisky, Anna, Uzuner, Ozlem
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocu004