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A Semantic Framework to Improve Interoperability of Malaria Surveillance Systems
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In: Online Journal of Public Health Informatics; Vol 10 No 1 (2018) ; 1947-2579 (2018)
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OrganismTagger: detection, normalization and grounding of organism entities in biomedical documents
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Why the Body Comes First: Effects of Experimenter Touch on Infants' Word Finding
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In: Faculty Journal Articles (2015)
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Access, recognition and representation: philanthropy and ageing in a multicultural society
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Semantic querying of relational data for clinical intelligence: a semantic web services-based approach
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Abstract:
Abstract Background Clinical Intelligence, as a research and engineering discipline, is dedicated to the development of tools for data analysis for the purposes of clinical research, surveillance, and effective health care management. Self-service ad hoc querying of clinical data is one desirable type of functionality. Since most of the data are currently stored in relational or similar form, ad hoc querying is problematic as it requires specialised technical skills and the knowledge of particular data schemas. Results A possible solution is semantic querying where the user formulates queries in terms of domain ontologies that are much easier to navigate and comprehend than data schemas. In this article, we are exploring the possibility of using SADI Semantic Web services for semantic querying of clinical data. We have developed a prototype of a semantic querying infrastructure for the surveillance of, and research on, hospital-acquired infections. Conclusions Our results suggest that SADI can support ad-hoc, self-service, semantic queries of relational data in a Clinical Intelligence context. The use of SADI compares favourably with approaches based on declarative semantic mappings from data schemas to ontologies, such as query rewriting and RDFizing by materialisation, because it can easily cope with situations when (i) some computation is required to turn relational data into RDF or OWL, e.g., to implement temporal reasoning, or (ii) integration with external data sources is necessary.
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10393/33957 https://doi.org/10.1186/2041-1480-4-9
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A-class genitive subject effect : a pragmatic and discourse grammar approach to A-and O-class genitive subject selection in Hawaiian
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Diaspora philanthropy in Australia: a preliminary critique
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In: Diaspora: a journal of transnational studies, Vol. 16, no. 3 (Winter 2007), pp. 323-336 (2007)
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