A Component-Based Architecture for Automation of Protocol-Directed Therapy
From Tetherless World Wiki
Citation: Mark A. Musen and Samson W. Tu and Amar K. Das and Yuval Shahar. (1995) A Component-Based Architecture for Automation of Protocol-Directed Therapy. In , 1995.
| Publication techreport ( Edit ) | |
| type | Technical Report |
| bibtype | techreport |
| Bibtex basics | |
| author | Mark A. Musen and Samson W. Tu and Amar K. Das and Yuval Shahar |
| title | A Component-Based Architecture for Automation of Protocol-Directed Therapy |
| number | KSL-95-28 |
| institution | Knowledge Systems, AI Laboratory |
| year | 1995 |
| Bibtex more | |
| note | Updated April. Medical Computer Science |
| Access Paper | |
| abstract | The automation of protocol-based care requires reasoning about a patient's situation over time and about how the standard protocol plan can be adapted to address the patient's current clinical situation. The EON architecture brings together (1) a skeletal-planning reasoning method, ESPR, that can determine appropriate clinical interventions by instantiating an abstract protocol specification, (2) a temporal-reasoning system, RESUME, that can infer from time-stamped patient data higher-level, interval-based concepts, and (3) a historical database system, Chronus, that can perform temporal queries on a database of interval-based patient descriptions. The modular problem-solving elements of EON operate on knowledge bases of clinical protocols that clinicians enter into domain-specific knowledge-acquisition tools generated by the PROTEGE-II system. The EON architecture provides an integrated framework for development, execution, and maintenance of clinical-protocol knowledge bases. |
| KSL Technical Report ID: KSL-95-28 |
Facts about A Component-Based Architecture for Automation of Protocol-Directed TherapyRDF feed
| Abstract | The automation of protocol-based care requ … The automation of protocol-based care requires reasoning about a patient's situation over time and about how the standard protocol plan can be adapted to address the patient's current clinical situation. The EON architecture brings together (1) a skeletal-planning reasoning method, ESPR, that can determine appropriate clinical interventions by instantiating an abstract protocol specification, (2) a temporal-reasoning system, RESUME, that can infer from time-stamped patient data higher-level, interval-based concepts, and (3) a historical database system, Chronus, that can perform temporal queries on a database of interval-based patient descriptions. The modular problem-solving elements of EON operate on knowledge bases of clinical protocols that clinicians enter into domain-specific knowledge-acquisition tools generated by the PROTEGE-II system. The EON architecture provides an integrated framework for development, execution, and maintenance of clinical-protocol knowledge bases. ance of clinical-protocol knowledge bases. |
| Author | Mark A. Musen and Samson W. Tu and Amar K. Das and Yuval Shahar + |
| Bibtype | techreport + |
| Has author | Mark A. Musen and Samson W. Tu and Amar K. Das and Yuval Shahar + |
| Has identifier | KSL-95-28 + |
| Has publishing details | 1995 + |
| Has title | A Component-Based Architecture for Automation of Protocol-Directed Therapy + |
| Has year | 1995 + |
| Institution | Knowledge Systems, AI Laboratory + |
| Ksl tr id | KSL-95-28 + |
| Note | Updated April. Medical Computer Science + |
| Number | KSL-95-28 + |
| Process note | NO + |
| Title | A Component-Based Architecture for Automation of Protocol-Directed Therapy + |
| Year | 1995 + |
Resource > Thing > Entity > Document > Scientific Document > Publication
Resource > Thing > Entity > Document > Scientific Document > Publication > Technical Report
Resource > Thing > Entity > Document > Scientific Document > Publication > Technical Report > KSL Technical Report
