Graphical Access to Medical Expert Systems: IV. Experiments to Determine the Role of Spoken Input

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Graphical Access to Medical Expert Systems: IV. Experiments to Determine the Role of Spoken Input +  Has identifier

Graphical Access to Medical Expert Systems: IV. Experiments to Determine the Role of Spoken Input +  Ksl tr id

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Graphical Access to Medical Expert Systems: IV. Experiments to Determine the Role of Spoken Input

Bibtype  techreport

Has publishing details  April,1993

Has title  Graphical Access to Medical Expert Systems: IV. Experiments to Determine the Role of Spoken Input

Has where published  KSL-90-69

Has year  1993

Title  Graphical Access to Medical Expert Systems: IV. Experiments to Determine the Role of Spoken Input

Year  1993

Abstract  Our goal is to design improved interfaces Our goal is to design improved interfaces for medical expert systems. We have explored previously the use of graphical techniques to improve the acceptance by clinicians of the user interface. Now that devices that accept spoken input are available, we wish to design interfaces that take advantage of this potentially more natural modality for interaction. To understand how clinicians might want to speak to a medical decision-support system, we carried out an experiment that simulated the availability of a spoken interface to the ONCOCIN medical expert system. ONCOCIN provides therapy advice for patients on complex cancer therapy protocols based on a description of the patient's current medical status and laboratory-test values. In the experiment, we had oncologists present a clinical case while observing the ONCOCIN flowsheet display. A project member listened to the presentation and filled in values for the flowsheet, as well as introducing purposeful misunderstandings of the input. The results suggest that each individual developed a stereotypical grammar for communicating with the program. Our experience with the purposeful miscommunications suggests particular ways to tailor requests for repetition based on which part of the utterance was not understood. part of the utterance was not understood.

Author  Ellen Isaacs and Carl E. Wulfman and Janice Anne Rohn and Christopher D. Lane and Lawrence M. Fagan +

Has author  Ellen Isaacs and Carl E. Wulfman and Janice Anne Rohn and Christopher D. Lane and Lawrence M. Fagan +

Has identifier  Graphical Access to Medical Expert Systems: IV. Experiments to Determine the Role of Spoken Input +

Institution  Knowledge Systems, AI Laboratory +

Ksl tr id  Graphical Access to Medical Expert Systems: IV. Experiments to Determine the Role of Spoken Input +

Month  April +

Number  Graphical Access to Medical Expert Systems: IV. Experiments to Determine the Role of Spoken Input +

Process note  YES +

Categories  KSL Technical Report +, Publication +, Technical Report +

 

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