Title :
A Knowledge Editing Service for Multisource Data Management in Remote Health Monitoring
Author :
Colantonio, S. ; Esposito, M. ; Martinelli, Mario ; De Pietro, G. ; Salvetti, O.
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Inf. Sci. & Technol., Pisa, Italy
Abstract :
Remote health monitoring (RHM) programmes are being increasingly developed to face the pervasive diffusion of chronic diseases. RHM strongly relies on Information and Communications Technologies (ICT) intelligent platforms devised to remotely acquire multisource data, process these according to specific domain knowledge, and support clinical decision making. However, since RHM domain is continuously evolving and the pertinent knowledge is not yet consolidated, there is a great demand for services and tools that allow the encoded knowledge to be modified and enriched. This paper presents a knowledge editing service (KES), which aims at enabling clinicians to insert novel knowledge, in a controlled fashion, into an ICT intelligent platform. The solution proposed is innovative since it addresses synergistically peculiar issues related to 1) RHM knowledge format; 2) controlled editing patterns; 3) knowledge verification; and 4) cooperative knowledge editing. None of the existing methods and systems for knowledge authoring tackles all these aspects at the same time. A prototype of the KES has been implemented and evaluated in real operational conditions.
Keywords :
biomedical communication; data acquisition; data mining; decision making; decision support systems; diseases; knowledge verification; medical computing; patient monitoring; Information-and-Communications Technologies intelligent platforms; controlled editing patterns; cooperative knowledge editing; knowledge editing service; knowledge verification; multisource data acquisition; multisource data management; pervasive chronic disease diffusion; remote health monitoring programmes; specific domain knowledge; support clinical decision making; Biomedical monitoring; Current measurement; Decision support systems; Knowledge engineering; Patient monitoring; Remote monitoring; Usability; Decision support systems; knowledge authoring; knowledge engineering; patient monitoring; usability study; Biomedical Engineering; Computer Communication Networks; Decision Support Systems, Clinical; Humans; Monitoring, Physiologic; Questionnaires; Telemetry;
Journal_Title :
Information Technology in Biomedicine, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TITB.2012.2215622