scholarly journals Beyond Two Cultures: Cultural Infrastructure for Data-driven Decision Support

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-94
Author(s):  
Nikki L. B. Freeman ◽  
John Sperger ◽  
Helal El-Zaatari ◽  
Anna R. Kahkoska ◽  
Minxin Lu ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 2397-2412
Author(s):  
Antonia Nisioti ◽  
George Loukas ◽  
Aron Laszka ◽  
Emmanouil Panaousis

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Apostolos Arsenopoulos ◽  
Elissaios Sarmas ◽  
Andriana Stavrakaki ◽  
Ioanna Giannouli ◽  
John Psarras

Author(s):  
Nawfal El Moukhi ◽  
Ikram El Azami ◽  
Abdelaaziz Mouloudi ◽  
Abdelali Elmounadi

The data warehouse design is currently recognized as the most important and complicated phase in any project of decision support system implementation. Its complexity is primarily due to the proliferation of data source types and the lack of a standardized and well-structured method, hence the increasing interest from researchers who have tried to develop new methods for the automation and standardization of this critical stage of the project. In this paper, the authors present the set of developed methods that follows the data-driven paradigm, and they propose a new data-driven method called X-ETL. This method aims to automating the data warehouse design by generating star models from relational data. This method is mainly based on a set of rules derived from the related works, the Model-Driven Architecture (MDA) and the XML language.


2019 ◽  
pp. 1-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathijs P. Hendriks ◽  
Xander A.A.M. Verbeek ◽  
Thijs van Vegchel ◽  
Maurice J.C. van der Sangen ◽  
Luc J.A. Strobbe ◽  
...  

PURPOSE The essence of guideline recommendations often is intertwined in large texts. This impedes clinical implementation and evaluation and delays timely modular revisions needed to deal with an ever-growing amount of knowledge and application of personalized medicine. The aim of this project was to model guideline recommendations as data-driven clinical decision trees (CDTs) that are clinically interpretable and suitable for implementation in decision support systems. METHODS All recommendations of the Dutch national breast cancer guideline for nonmetastatic breast cancer were translated into CDTs. CDTs were constructed by nodes, branches, and leaves that represent data items (patient and tumor characteristics [eg, T stage]), data item values (eg, T2 or less), and recommendations (eg, chemotherapy), respectively. For all data items, source of origin was identified (eg, pathology), and where applicable, data item values were defined on the basis of existing classification and coding systems (eg, TNM, Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System, Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine). All unique routes through all CDTs were counted to measure the degree of data-based personalization of recommendations. RESULTS In total, 60 CDTs were necessary to cover the whole guideline and were driven by 114 data items. Data items originated from pathology (49%), radiology (27%), clinical (12%), and multidisciplinary team (12%) reports. Of all data items, 101 (89%) could be classified by existing classification and coding systems. All 60 CDTs could be integrated in an interactive decision support app that contained 376 unique patient subpopulations. CONCLUSION By defining data items unambiguously and unequivocally and coding them to an international coding system, it was possible to present a complex guideline as systematically constructed modular data-driven CDTs that are clinically interpretable and accessible in a decision support app.


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