2 research outputs found

    Thirty years of artificial intelligence in medicine (AIME) conferences: A review of research themes

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    Over the past 30 years, the international conference on Artificial Intelligence in MEdicine (AIME) has been organized at different venues across Europe every 2 years, establishing a forum for scientific exchange and creating an active research community. The Artificial Intelligence in Medicine journal has published theme issues with extended versions of selected AIME papers since 1998

    An architecture for automated reasoning systems for genome-wide studies

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    The massive amounts of data generated by high-throughput experiments makes modern biomedical research a data-intensive discipline, shifting the research methodology from a hypothesis-based approach to a hypothesis-free one. A formal procedure should be defined to properly design a study, understand the outcomes and plan improvements for each task performed during the experiments. Such formal approach needs the identification of a high-level conceptual model of the knowledge discovery process occurring in genome-wide studies: this is what existing computational tools lack. Starting from an epistemological model of the discovery process proposed for diagnostic reasoning, we describe how the design and execution of modern genome-wide studies can be modelled using the same framework. We show the general validity of the model, how it can be instantiated to model typical scenarios of genome-wide Studies, and how we use it to develop tools aimed at building semi-automated reasoning systems
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