DocumentCode
116157
Title
Analyzing medical contexts in ubiquitous computing home environments with denotational mathematics
Author
Sarivougioukas, John ; Vagelatos, Aristides
Author_Institution
Gen. Hosp. of Athens, Athens, Greece
fYear
2014
fDate
18-20 Aug. 2014
Firstpage
109
Lastpage
116
Abstract
Home healthcare presents important advantages and benefits over traditional hospitalization, supported by the contemporary scientific and technological achievements. The ubiquitous computing paradigm is considered suitable to support nursing at home provided that the distributed computing devices participate in the commonly interpreted context. Wirelessly and ad-hoc connected large numbers of disseminated sensors and computing devices in the home environment present problems related to energy limitations and the patients´ mobility resulting in the introduction of systemic complexity, uncertainty, and ambiguity. In addition, describing such a system with analytical mathematics requires and includes extensive details becoming tedious if not impractical. Denotational mathematics provides an alternative formal methodological framework capable to describe the important components, the operation, and the behavior of such complicated systems. With the employment of denotational mathematics an attempt is made to design a system that develops medically valid contextual contents to support patients hospitalized at home. The developed design provides the contents of the medical context enriched by the rules of the current state of medical knowledge. The technically evolved context is compared against predetermined medical contexts to obtain valid interpretation. The presented design has the ambition to support efficiently the cooperation of the discrete software applications looking for the development of a commonly interpreted medical context at home.
Keywords
health care; medical computing; ubiquitous computing; analytical mathematics; analyzing medical contexts; computing devices; contextual contents; denotational mathematics; disseminated sensors; distributed computing devices; home environment; home healthcare; medical knowledge; patient mobility; ubiquitous computing home environments; ubiquitous computing paradigm; Context; Mathematics; Medical services; Sensor fusion; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Ubiquitous computing; denotational mathematics; home care; medical environment; ubiquitous computing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Cognitive Informatics & Cognitive Computing (ICCI*CC), 2014 IEEE 13th International Conference on
Conference_Location
London
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-6080-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICCI-CC.2014.6921449
Filename
6921449
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