Title :
Reconciling users´ needs and formal requirements: issues in developing a reusable ontology for medicine
Author :
Rector, Alan L. ; Zanstra, Pieter E. ; Solomon, W. Daniel ; Rogers, Jeremy E. ; Baud, Robert ; Ceusters, Werner ; Claassen, Wim ; Kirby, John ; Rodrigues, Jean-Marie ; Mori, Angelo Rossi ; Van der Haring, Egbert J. ; Wagner, Judith
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Manchester Univ., UK
Abstract :
A common language, or terminology, for representing what clinicians have said and done is an important requirement for individual clinical systems, and it is a prerequisite for integrating disparate applications in a distributed telematic healthcare environment. Formal representations based on description logics or closely related formalisms are increasingly used for representing medical terminologies, GALEN\´s experience in using one such formalism raises two major issues, as follows: how to make ontologies based on description logics easy to use and understand for both clinicians and applications developers; what features are required of the ontology and description logic if they are to achieve their aims, based on our experience we put forward four contentions: two relating to each of these two issues, as follows: that natural language generation is essential to make a description logic based ontology accessible to users; that the description logic based ontology should be treated as an "assembly language" and accessed via "intermediate representations" oriented to users and "perspectives" adapting it to specific applications; that independence and reuse are best supported by partitioning the subsumption hierarchy of elementary concepts into orthogonal taxonomies, each of which forms a pure tree in which the branches at each level are disjoint but nonexhaustive subconcepts of the parent concept; that the expressivity of the description logic must include support for transitive relations despite the computational cost.
Keywords :
formal logic; formal specification; health care; information needs; medical expert systems; medical information systems; medicine; natural language interfaces; nomenclature; GALEN; applications developers; assembly language; clinical systems; clinicians; common language; computational cost; description logics; disjoint subconcepts; disparate application integration; distributed telematic healthcare environment; expressivity; formal representations; formal requirements; independence; intermediate representations; medical terminologies; medicine; natural language generation; nonexhaustive subconcepts; orthogonal taxonomies; pure tree; reusable ontology; subsumption elementary concept hierarchy partitioning; transitive relation; user needs; Assembly; Computational efficiency; Logic; Medical services; Medical treatment; Natural languages; Ontologies; Taxonomy; Telematics; Terminology; Clinical Medicine; Disease; Terminology as Topic;
Journal_Title :
Information Technology in Biomedicine, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/4233.737578