DocumentCode :
1296912
Title :
Getting clinical about neural networks
Author :
Lewin, David L.
Author_Institution :
Silver Spring, MD, USA
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
fYear :
2000
Firstpage :
2
Lastpage :
5
Abstract :
A trained human being is, in many cases, the best diagnostician. This certainly remains true in medicine, but the success of new imaging technologies and clinical applications of molecular biology has meant that doctors are now inundated with diagnostic data. Although rule based systems have had some limited success assisting doctors, much concern remains about the poorly defined factors that physicians must use for diagnoses. Neural networks, which cross the line between artificial intelligence and statistical regression, find relationships that do not clearly spring out from a mass of data. Neural networks attempt, in an abstract mathematical way, to mimic the way the brain processes sensory information and are moving from the laboratory to the medical marketplace in the image processing units used to diagnose cancer or other diseases
Keywords :
DP industry; medical diagnostic computing; neural nets; abstract mathematical methods; artificial intelligence; brain; clinical applications; clinical neural networks; diagnostic data; doctors; imaging technologies; medical marketplace; medicine; molecular biology; sensory information; statistical regression; Artificial intelligence; Artificial neural networks; Biological neural networks; Biomedical imaging; Humans; Knowledge based systems; Laboratories; Medical diagnostic imaging; Neural networks; Springs;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Intelligent Systems and their Applications, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1094-7167
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/5254.820321
Filename :
820321
Link To Document :
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