DocumentCode
1849033
Title
Combining Evidence in Hybrid Medical Decision Support Models
Author
Cohen, M.E. ; Hudson, D.L.
Author_Institution
Univ. of California, San Francisco
fYear
2007
fDate
22-26 Aug. 2007
Firstpage
5144
Lastpage
5147
Abstract
Hybrid methods are particularly useful for building diagnostic models based on biomedical data due to the wide variety of data types that are routinely encountered. Evaluation of the effectiveness of hybrid systems is complicated when multiple methods are combined to reach a conclusion. In the work described here, methods for combining results based on the general reliability of each model as well as its applicability to the case under evaluation are presented. Reliability measures differ depending on whether symbolic or numeric information is analyzed and depend on the strength of the decision algorithm as well as the soundness of the domain knowledge upon which the decision is based. In addition to reliability, combination of results is complicated by the need to weight each method to form the final conclusion. Weighting factors depend on the degree of certainty that the decision is correct for each of the methods. The process is illustrated in an application to cardiac diagnosis.
Keywords
cardiology; decision support systems; medical diagnostic computing; medical information systems; patient diagnosis; biomedical data; cardiac diagnosis; decision algorithm; diagnostic models; hybrid medical decision support models; medical decision making; numeric information analysis; symbolic information analysis; Algorithm design and analysis; Bioinformatics; Biomedical measurements; Current measurement; Decision making; Decision support systems; Humans; Information analysis; Intelligent agent; Medical diagnostic imaging; Hybrid systems; decision-support systems; intelligent agents; medical decision making; Algorithms; California; Decision Support Systems, Clinical; Decision Support Techniques; Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted; Evidence-Based Medicine; Expert Systems; Humans; Medical Records Systems, Computerized; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; User-Computer Interface;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2007. EMBS 2007. 29th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location
Lyon
ISSN
1557-170X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-0787-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IEMBS.2007.4353498
Filename
4353498
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