scholarly journals A proof-of-concept framework for the preference elicitation and evaluation of health informatics technologies: the online PRESENT patient experience dashboard as a case example

2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanouil Mentzakis ◽  
Daria Tkacz ◽  
Carol Rivas
2017 ◽  
Vol 70 ◽  
pp. 152-159
Author(s):  
T.M. Stewart ◽  
T. Ramilan ◽  
F. Yu

Biopesticides have a number of positive attributes compared with conventional pesticides but direct comparisons are difficult to achieve objectively. Therefore, an indexing method was developed and used to compare the user-convenience and flexibility of spray-applied biopesticides commercially available in the New Zealand with similar conventional pesticides. Relative efficacy was not assessed. Biopesticides scored higher than conventional pesticides when all parameters were considered, particularly for the major fruit crops. Biopesticides had significantly shorter withholding periods, required less resistance management, seldom needed an approved handler, and were registered for more crops than conventional pesticides. However, they were less compatible with other products and some required special storage conditions. There was little difference between the two groups regarding bee toxicity, target range and adjuvant requirements. The methodology used here could potentially be used to compare any individual pesticides or pesticide groups pertaining to a particular measure of interest.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel M. Nicholls ◽  
Wayne Aubrey ◽  
Kurt de Grave ◽  
Leander Schietgat ◽  
Christopher J. Creevey ◽  
...  

AbstractHigh-throughput DNA sequencing has enabled us to look beyond consensus reference sequences to the variation observed in sequences within organisms; their haplotypes. Recovery, or assembly of haplotypes has proved computationally difficult and there exist many probabilistic heuristics that attempt to recover the original haplotypes for a single organism of known ploidy. However, existing approaches make simplifications or assumptions that are easily violated when investigating sequence variation within a metagenome.We propose the metahaplome as the set of haplotypes for any particular genomic region of interest within a metagenomic data set and present Hansel and Gretel, a data structure and algorithm that together provide a proof of concept framework for the recovery of true haplotypes from a metagenomic data set. The algorithm performs incremental haplotype recovery, using smoothed Naive Bayes — a simple, efficient and effective method.Hansel and Gretel pose several advantages over existing solutions: the framework is capable of recovering haplotypes from metagenomes, does not require a priori knowledge about the input data, makes no assumptions regarding the distribution of alleles at variant sites, is robust to error, and uses all available evidence from aligned reads, without altering or discarding observed variation. We evaluate our approach using synthetic metahaplomes constructed from sets of real genes and show that up to 99% of SNPs on a haplotype can be correctly recovered from short reads that originate from a metagenomic data set.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Thorpe ◽  
John Fouyaxis ◽  
Jessica Lipschitz ◽  
Amy Nielson ◽  
Wenhao Li ◽  
...  

UNSTRUCTURED The research marketplace has seen a flood of open-source or commercial platforms designed to facilitate aggregation of active Ecological Momentary Assessment or passive sensor data in order to track behaviours and/or measure intervention effects in real-time. It is important for clinician-researchers to ask the right questions, in a thorough manner, when selecting a commercial m-health platform to deploy in their research projects. This paper presents a practical framework clinician-researchers should consider when selecting a commercial m-health platform to deploy in their research projects. Variables such as cost, data protection, and participant privacy are obvious to most. However, additional logistical and functional considerations such as platform IT support, diversity of data collection facilitated by a given platform, fitness for observational research versus real-time intervention development and delivery are essential to consider prior to deciding on a platform. A platform developed by The Flinders University Human Centred Health Informatics lab is described and critiqued against the proposed framework. A proof-of-concept implementation in Behavioural Activation Therapy is outlined to show the practical implications of the choices made against the framework.


Author(s):  
A. G. Jackson ◽  
M. Rowe

Diffraction intensities from intermetallic compounds are, in the kinematic approximation, proportional to the scattering amplitude from the element doing the scattering. More detailed calculations have shown that site symmetry and occupation by various atom species also affects the intensity in a diffracted beam. [1] Hence, by measuring the intensities of beams, or their ratios, the occupancy can be estimated. Measurement of the intensity values also allows structure calculations to be made to determine the spatial distribution of the potentials doing the scattering. Thermal effects are also present as a background contribution. Inelastic effects such as loss or absorption/excitation complicate the intensity behavior, and dynamical theory is required to estimate the intensity value.The dynamic range of currents in diffracted beams can be 104or 105:1. Hence, detection of such information requires a means for collecting the intensity over a signal-to-noise range beyond that obtainable with a single film plate, which has a S/N of about 103:1. Although such a collection system is not available currently, a simple system consisting of instrumentation on an existing STEM can be used as a proof of concept which has a S/N of about 255:1, limited by the 8 bit pixel attributes used in the electronics. Use of 24 bit pixel attributes would easily allowthe desired noise range to be attained in the processing instrumentation. The S/N of the scintillator used by the photoelectron sensor is about 106 to 1, well beyond the S/N goal. The trade-off that must be made is the time for acquiring the signal, since the pattern can be obtained in seconds using film plates, compared to 10 to 20 minutes for a pattern to be acquired using the digital scan. Parallel acquisition would, of course, speed up this process immensely.


2017 ◽  
Vol 23 ◽  
pp. 258
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Wendt ◽  
Maria Bates ◽  
Reese Randle ◽  
Jason Orne ◽  
Cameron Macdonald ◽  
...  

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