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SGAI
2009
Springer

Ontology-Driven Hypothesis Generation to Explain Anomalous Patient Responses to Treatment

14 years 7 months ago
Ontology-Driven Hypothesis Generation to Explain Anomalous Patient Responses to Treatment
Within the medical domain there are clear expectations as to how a patient should respond to treatments administered. When these responses are not observed it can be challenging for clinicians to understand the anomalous responses. The work reported here describes a tool which can detect anomalous patient responses to treatment and further suggest hypotheses to explain the anomaly. In order to develop this tool, we have undertaken a study to determine how Intensive Care Unit (ICU) clinicians identify anomalous patient responses; we then asked further clinicians to provide potential explanations for such anomalies. The high level reasoning deployed by the clinicians has been captured and generalised to form the procedural component of the ontology-driven tool. An evaluation has shown that the tool successfully reproduced the clinician’s hypotheses in the majority of cases. Finally, the paper concludes by describing planned extensions to this work.
Laura Moss, Derek H. Sleeman, Malcolm Sim, Malcolm
Added 27 May 2010
Updated 27 May 2010
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where SGAI
Authors Laura Moss, Derek H. Sleeman, Malcolm Sim, Malcolm Booth, Malcolm Daniel, Lyndsay Donaldson, Charlotte J. Gilhooly, Martin Hughes, John Kinsella
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