The immune system as a model for pattern recognition and classification.
To design a pattern recognition engine based on concepts derived from mammalian immune systems.
Author(s): Carter, J H
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2000.0070028
To design a pattern recognition engine based on concepts derived from mammalian immune systems.
Author(s): Carter, J H
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2000.0070028
A new form of scientific medical meeting has emerged in the last few years--the virtual congress. This article describes the general role of computer technologies and the Internet in the development of this new means of scientific communication, by reviewing the history of "cyber sessions" in medical education and the rationale, methods, and initial results of the First Virtual Congress of Cardiology. Instructions on how to participate in this virtual [...]
Author(s): Lecueder, S, Manyari, D E
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2000.0070021
To evaluate the performance of a natural language processing system in extracting pneumonia-related concepts from chest x-ray reports.
Author(s): Fiszman, M, Chapman, W W, Aronsky, D, Evans, R S, Haug, P J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2000.0070593
To assess the effects of a computer-based patient record system on human cognition. Computer-based patient record systems can be considered "cognitive artifacts," which shape the way in which health care workers obtain, organize, and reason with knowledge.
Author(s): Patel, V L, Kushniruk, A W, Yang, S, Yale, J F
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2000.0070569
Nursing Vocabulary Summit participants were challenged to consider whether reference terminology and information models might be a way to move toward better capture of data in electronic medical records. A requirement of such reference models is fidelity to representations of domain knowledge. This article discusses embedded structures in three different approaches to organizing domain knowledge: scientific reasoning, expertise, and standardized nursing languages. The concept of pressure ulcer is presented as [...]
Author(s): Harris, M R, Graves, J R, Solbrig, H R, Elkin, P L, Chute, C G
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2000.0070539
The authors study the extraction of useful phrases from a natural language database by statistical methods. The aim is to leverage human effort by providing preprocessed phrase lists with a high percentage of useful material.
Author(s): Kim, W, Wilbur, W J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2000.0070499
To compare out-of-box performance of three commercially available continuous speech recognition software packages: IBM ViaVoice 98 with General Medicine Vocabulary; Dragon Systems NaturallySpeaking Medical Suite, version 3.0; and L&H Voice Xpress for Medicine, General Medicine Edition, version 1.2.
Author(s): Devine, E G, Gaehde, S A, Curtis, A C
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2000.0070462
This paper provides a "viewpoint discussion" based on a presentation made to the 2000 Symposium of the American College of Medical Informatics. It discusses potential opportunities for researchers in health informatics to become involved in the rapidly growing field of bioinformatics, using the activities of the Yale Center for Medical Informatics as a case study. One set of opportunities occurs where bioinformatics research itself intersects with the clinical world. Examples [...]
Author(s): Miller, P L
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2000.0070431
To measure the strength of agreement between the concepts and records retrieved from a computerized patient database, in response to physician-derived questions, using a semantic terminological model for clinical findings with those concepts and records excerpted clinically by manual identification. The performance of the semantic terminological model is also compared with the more established retrieval methods of free-text search, ICD-10, and hierarchic retrieval.
Author(s): Brown, P J, Sönksen, P
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2000.0070392
The task of creating and maintaining a front end to a large institutional entity-attribute-value (EAV) database can be cumbersome when using traditional client-server technology. Switching to Web technology as a delivery vehicle solves some of these problems but introduces others. In particular, Web development environments tend to be primitive, and many features that client-server developers take for granted are missing. WebEAV is a generic framework for Web development that is [...]
Author(s): Nadkarni, P M, Brandt, C M, Marenco, L
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2000.0070343