by
Vishal Jain
Sharda University, India
Jyotir Moy Chatterjee
Lord Buddha Education Foundation, Nepal
Ankita Bansal
Netaji Subhas University of Technology, India
and
Abha Jain
Shaheed Rajguru College of Applied Sciences for Women, Delhi University, India
This edition first published 2022 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, USA and Scrivener Publishing LLC, 100 Cummings Center, Suite 541J, Beverly, MA 01915, USA
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
ISBN 978-1-119-76229-4
Cover image: Pixabay.Com Cover design by Russell Richardson
Set in size of 11pt and Minion Pro by Manila Typesetting Company, Makati, Philippines
Printed in the USA
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Preface
The tremendous amount of data being generated on a daily basis in hospitals and other medical institutions needs to be properly harnessed and analyzed in order to gain useful insights. In other words, the health-related data needs to be explored in order to uncover valuable information that could lead to improved healthcare practices and the development of better biomedical products. However, there are many challenges, which need to be addressed before this goal is reached. One of the major challenges is interoperability of health and medical data. The data generated not only comes from different sources but also has inconsistencies in naming, structure, and format. An important requirement is to capture relevant data and also make it widely available for others to use. In addition to the data integration problem, user interaction with the data is another challenge. The difficulty lies in search handling, data navigation and data presentation. Finally, another challenge is how to use this huge amount of data to find valuable new patterns and transform such data into valuable knowledge, leading to potential improvement of resource utilization and patient health, and the development of biomedical products. There is a vast potential for data mining and data analytics tools in healthcare that could lead to useful information for decision making. In recent years, the Semantic Web has been gaining ground in addressing these challenges. The aim of this book is to analyze the current status on how the Semantic Web can be used to solve various challenges and enlighten readers with key advances in ontology-based information retrieval techniques in the healthcare domain. The following is a brief summary of the wide range of subjects covered throughout the book.
- Chapter 1 discusses various information extraction techniques used to model the documents product/service reviews. The advantages of using the Semantic Web to ease communication between businesses and improve processes are also discussed.
- Chapter 2 explores the impact of Semantic Web technologies and the challenges associated with their use in effective healthcare systems and also proposes solutions, which can be achieved with the present technology. In addition to this, some algorithms, frameworks, and real-time database systems realized with the help of artificial intelligence and web technology-based solutions are also discussed.
- Chapter 3 focuses on the importance of an ontology-based system for a patient monitoring system. A domain ontology has been constructed to preserve the details of patient health issues. With the support of ontology, a patient monitoring system is constructed wherein data concerning every detail about the patient and their health is stored.
- Chapter 4 highlights the role of Semantic Web technologies in improving services provided by healthcare systems. It elaborates on the search techniques used by researchers in the field to find the desired information. The role of semantics, how they are beneficial in the search process, and domain-specific resources are presented in detail. The latest technological advancements and resources from the bio-medical field are also discussed.
- Chapter 5 discusses what actionable content should look like in practice and how it can become more efficient by aiding in clinical decision-making and administrative capability. The chapter renders various definitions of actionable content, and also focuses on the stages of health analytics and how ontology can be used for prescriptive health analytics.
- Chapter 6 depicts the retrieval of ontology-based information from the medical literature database MEDLINE. The main focus of the chapter is to enhance the retrieval of information from the medical literature database and conduct the search with more clarity. The approach discussed to achieve this is the preliminary design and execution of an ontology-based intelligent agent system that applies Semantic Web language, which benefits efficient systematic retrieval of medical information.