Literature DB >> 9082134

Navigating to knowledge.

M S Tuttle1, W G Cole, D D Sheretz, S J Nelson.   

Abstract

One way to fulfill point-of-care knowledge needs is to present caregivers with a visual representation of the available "answers". Using such a representation, caregivers can recognize what they want, rather than have to recall what they need, and then navigate to an appropriate answer. Given selected pieces of information from a computer-based patient record, an interface can anticipate certain knowledge needs by initializing caregiver navigation in a semantic neighborhood of answers likely to be relevant to the patient at hand. These notions draw heavily on two collaborative projects--the U.S. National Library of Medicine Unified Medical Language System and the U.S. National Cancer Institute Knowledge Server. Both of these projects support navigation because they make the structure of medical knowledge explicit in a way that can be exploited by human interfaces.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1995        PMID: 9082134

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Methods Inf Med        ISSN: 0026-1270            Impact factor:   2.176


  16 in total

1.  From French vocabulary to the Unified Medical Language System: a preliminary study.

Authors:  O Bodenreider; A T McCray
Journal:  Stud Health Technol Inform       Date:  1998

Review 2.  An object-oriented taxonomy of medical data presentations.

Authors:  J Starren; S B Johnson
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2000 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 4.497

3.  Battling Scylla and Charybdis: the search for redundancy and ambiguity in the 2001 UMLS metathesaurus.

Authors:  J J Cimino
Journal:  Proc AMIA Symp       Date:  2001

4.  Aggregating UMLS semantic types for reducing conceptual complexity.

Authors:  A T McCray; A Burgun; O Bodenreider
Journal:  Stud Health Technol Inform       Date:  2001

5.  Linking biomedical language information and knowledge resources: GO and UMLS.

Authors:  I N Sarkar; M N Cantor; R Gelman; F Hartel; Y A Lussier
Journal:  Pac Symp Biocomput       Date:  2003

6.  Exploring semantic groups through visual approaches.

Authors:  Olivier Bodenreider; Alexa T McCray
Journal:  J Biomed Inform       Date:  2003-12       Impact factor: 6.317

7.  Integrated advanced information management systems: a twenty-year history at the University of Cincinnati.

Authors:  J Roger Guard; Ralph F Brueggemann; William K Fant; John J Hutton; John R Kues; Stephen A Marine; Gregory W Rouan; Leslie C Schick
Journal:  J Med Libr Assoc       Date:  2004-04

8.  Use of SNOMED CT to represent clinical research data: a semantic characterization of data items on case report forms in vasculitis research.

Authors:  Rachel L Richesson; James E Andrews; Jeffrey P Krischer
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2006-06-23       Impact factor: 4.497

Review 9.  Computational approaches to phenotyping: high-throughput phenomics.

Authors:  Yves A Lussier; Yang Liu
Journal:  Proc Am Thorac Soc       Date:  2007-01

10.  Variation of SNOMED CT coding of clinical research concepts among coding experts.

Authors:  James E Andrews; Rachel L Richesson; Jeffrey Krischer
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2007-04-25       Impact factor: 4.497

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