DocumentCode :
957045
Title :
Knowledge engineering for medical decision making: A review of computer-based clinical decision aids
Author :
Shortliffe, Edward H. ; Buchanan, Bruce G. ; Feigenbaum, Edward A.
Author_Institution :
Stanford University, Stanford, CA
Volume :
67
Issue :
9
fYear :
1979
Firstpage :
1207
Lastpage :
1224
Abstract :
Computer-based models of medical decision making account for a large portion of clinical computing efforts. This article reviews representative examples from each of several major medical computing paradigms. These include 1) clinical algorithms, 2) clinical databanks that include analytic functions, 3) mathematical models of physical processes, 4) pattern recognition, 5) Bayesian statistics, 6) decision analysis, and 7) symbolic reasoning or artificial intelligence. Because the techniques used in the various systems cannot be examined exhaustively, the case studies in each category are used as a basis for studying general strengths and limitations. It is noted that no one method is best for all applications. However, emphasis is given to the limitations of early work that have made artificial intelligence techniques and knowledge engineering research particularly attractive. We stress that considerable basic research in medical computing remains to be done and that powerful new approaches may lie in the melding of two or more established techniques.
Keywords :
Algorithm design and analysis; Artificial intelligence; Bayesian methods; Biomedical computing; Data analysis; Decision making; Knowledge engineering; Mathematical model; Pattern analysis; Pattern recognition;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9219
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/PROC.1979.11436
Filename :
1455705
Link To Document :
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