Working Group Webinar Library
Webinar Library
Advancing Health at the Speed of AI
The dream of precision health is to develop a data-driven, continuous learning system where new health information is instantly incorporated to optimize care delivery and accelerate biomedical discovery. In reality, the health ecosystem is plagued by overwhelming unstructured data and unscalable manual processing. Self-supervised AI such as large language models (LLMs) can supercharge structuring of biomedical data and accelerate transformation towards precision health
Utilize AI to integrate both structured and unstructured data for clinical outcome analysis and advancements in health informatics
A significant portion of data in the healthcare industry exists as narrative text, such as clinical notes in electronic health record (EHR) systems, clinical trial descriptions, biomedical literature, and consumer-generated content on social media and online forums. With the advancements in Natural Language Processing (NLP) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) techniques, valuable insights, such as symptoms and causal relationships between medical concepts, can be extracted from various text data to aid in clinical decision-making and improve healthcare outcomes.
Natural Language Processing in Clinical Quality Measures used in Accountability Programs
This session will present the work of a community of practice supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore foundation to promote the use of NLP “at-scale” in CQM used in accountability programs.
Probing the Dimensions of Meaning in Medicine with Distributed Representations of Biomedical Language
Join the Natural Language Processing Working Group for a talk from Dr. Trevor Cohen on Probing the Dimensions of Meaning in Medicine with Distributed Representations of Biomedical Language.
Six Machine-Learning Methods for Predicting Hospital-Stay Durations for Patients with Sepsis: A Comparative Study
Sepsis is a life-threatening medical condition that, if not treated promptly, can result in tissue damage, organ failure, and death. According to the Centers for Disease Control, about 270,000 individuals die of sepsis in the United States each year. Further, sepsis expenditures accounted for 13% of total US hospital costs in 2013, totaling more than $24 billion.