Incremental Learning approaches to Biomedical decision problems
- Tortajada Velert, Salvador
- M. Robles Director
- Juan Miguel García Gómez Director
Defence university: Universitat Politècnica de València
Fecha de defensa: 17 September 2012
- Paulo Jorge Gomes Lisboa Chair
- J.V. Manjón Herrera Secretary
- José David Martín Guerrero Committee member
- Daniel Monleon Salvado Committee member
- Ivan Alberto Olier Caparroso Committee member
Type: Thesis
Abstract
During the last decade, a new trend in medicine is transforming the nature of healthcare from reactive to proactive. This new paradigm is changing into a personalized medicine where the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of disease is focused on individual patients. This paradigm is known as P4 medicine. Among other key benefits, P4 medicine aspires to detect diseases at an early stage and introduce diagnosis to stratify patients and diseases to select the optimal therapy based on individual observations and taking into account the patient outcomes to empower the physician, the patient, and their communication. This paradigm transformation relies on the availability of complex multi-level biomedical data that are increasingly accurate, since it is possible to find exactly the needed information, but also exponentially noisy, since the access to that information is more and more challenging. In order to take advantage of this information, an important effort is being made in the last decades to digitalize medical records and to develop new mathematical and computational methods for extracting maximum knowledge from patient records, building dynamic and disease-predictive models from massive amounts of integrated clinical and biomedical data. This requirement enables the use of computer-assisted Clinical Decision Support Systems for the management of individual patients. The Clinical Decision Support System (CDSS) are computational systems that provide precise and specific knowledge for the medical decisions to be adopted for diagnosis, prognosis, treatment and management of patients. The CDSS are highly related to the concept of evidence-based medicine since they infer medical knowledge from the biomedical databases and the acquisition protocols that are used for the development of the systems, give computational support based on evidence for the clinical practice, and evaluate the performance and the added value of the solution for each specific medical problem.