Sciweavers
Explore
Publications
Books
Software
Tutorials
Presentations
Lectures Notes
Datasets
Labs
Conferences
Community
Upcoming
Conferences
Top Ranked Papers
Most Viewed Conferences
Conferences by Acronym
Conferences by Subject
Conferences by Year
Tools
Sci2ools
International Keyboard
Graphical Social Symbols
CSS3 Style Generator
OCR
Web Page to Image
Web Page to PDF
Merge PDF
Split PDF
Latex Equation Editor
Extract Images from PDF
Convert JPEG to PS
Convert Latex to Word
Convert Word to PDF
Image Converter
PDF Converter
Community
Sciweavers
About
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Cookies
Free Online Productivity Tools
i2Speak
i2Symbol
i2OCR
iTex2Img
iWeb2Print
iWeb2Shot
i2Type
iPdf2Split
iPdf2Merge
i2Bopomofo
i2Arabic
i2Style
i2Image
i2PDF
iLatex2Rtf
Sci2ools
20
click to vote
DATASCIENCE
2007
favorite
Email
discuss
report
48
views
more
DATASCIENCE 2007
»
Possibility of Integrated Data Mining of Clinical Data
13 years 9 months ago
Download
www.codata.org
Akinori Abe, Norihiro Hagita, Michiko Furutani, Yo
Real-time Traffic
DATASCIENCE 2007
|
claim paper
Related Content
»
DebugIT for Patient Safety Improving the Treatment with Antibiotics through Multimedia Da...
»
Differential Privacy for Clinical Trial Data Preliminary Evaluations
»
Mining Clinical Data with a Temporal Dimension A Case Study
»
MiMiR an integrated platform for microarray data sharing mining and analysis
»
Clinical and financial outcomes analysis with existing hospital patient records
»
Mining clinical relationships from patient narratives
»
Learning to match and cluster large highdimensional data sets for data integration
»
The Enterprise Data Trust at Mayo Clinic a semantically integrated warehouse of biomedical...
»
Mining Healthcare Data with Temporal Association Rules Improvements and Assessment for a P...
more »
Post Info
More Details (n/a)
Added
13 Dec 2010
Updated
13 Dec 2010
Type
Journal
Year
2007
Where
DATASCIENCE
Authors
Akinori Abe, Norihiro Hagita, Michiko Furutani, Yoshiyuki Furutani, Rumiko Matsuoka
Comments
(0)
Researcher Info
DATASCIENCE 2002 Study Group
Computer Vision