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Tuesday, December 10 • 7:30am - 6:30pm
Machine Learning for Clinical Data Analysis and Healthcare

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Advances in medical information technology have resulted in enormous warehouses of data that are at once overwhelming and sparse. A single patient visit may result in tens to thousands of measurements and structured information, including clinical factors, diagnostic imaging, lab tests, genomic and proteomic tests. Hospitals may see thousands of patients each year. However, each patient may have relatively few visits to any particular medical provider. The resulting data are a heterogeneous amalgam of patient demographics, vital signs, diagnoses, records of treatment and medication receipt and annotations made by nurses or doctors, each with its own idiosyncrasies. The objective of this workshop is to discuss how advanced machine learning techniques can derive clinical and scientific impact from these messy, incomplete, and partial data. We will bring together machine learning researchers and experts in medical informatics who are involved in the development of algorithms or intelligent systems designed to improve quality of healthcare. Relevant areas include health monitoring systems, clinical data labeling and clustering, clinical outcome prediction, efficient and scalable processing of medical records, feature selection or dimensionality reduction in clinical data, tools for personalized medicine, and time-series analysis with medical applications.
http://goo.gl/lpgjyN


Tuesday December 10, 2013 7:30am - 6:30pm PST
Harvey's Tallac
  Workshops
  • Program_Schedule <br>Morning theme: Causality and Decision-Making with Medical Time series <br>7:00-7:25 - Poster Setup <br>7:25-7:30 - Welcome & Introduction <br>7:30-8:00 - Samantha Kleinberg -Causal Inference from Uncertain Time-Series Data <br>8:00-9:15 - Coffee Break and Poster Session <br>9:15-10:00 - Round Table Discussions <br>10-00-10:30 - Una-May O'Reilly - Secondary Use of Physiological Waveforms for Evidence-Generated Medicine <br>10:30-11:00 - Greg Cooper: Health Informatics Research Topics that Deserve More Attention <br>11:00-12:30 - Seizure Detection Challenge Presentation <br> <br>Afternoon theme: Machine Learning in Patient Risk Stratification <br>3:30-4:00 - Eric Horvitz - Data, Predictions, and Decisions in Healthcare: Reflections about Progress and Directions <br>4:00-4:30 - John Guttag - Big Data? Not Really. <br>4:30-5:15 - Coffee Break and Poster Session <br>5:15-5:45 - Wendy Chapman, Bridging the Gap Between Informatics Tools and Clinical User Needs <br> <br>Evening Theme: Intelligent Systems Designed to Assist Clinicians <br>5:45-6:30 - Panel on Health Monitoring Systems <br>6:30-7:00 - Ronald Summers (NIH): Radiology Image Processing CAD

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