G
G. De Moor
Researcher at Ghent University
Publications - 40
Citations - 867
G. De Moor is an academic researcher from Ghent University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health informatics & Health care. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 40 publications receiving 795 citations. Previous affiliations of G. De Moor include European Institute.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Electronic health records: new opportunities for clinical research
Pascal Coorevits,Pascal Coorevits,Mats Sundgren,Gunnar O. Klein,A Bahr,Brecht Claerhout,Christel Daniel,Martin Dugas,Danielle Dupont,Andreas Schmidt,Peter Singleton,G. De Moor,G. De Moor,Dipak Kalra +13 more
TL;DR: Some of the legal and ethical concerns of clinical research data reuse and technical security measures that can enable such research while protecting privacy are discussed.
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Grain size trends associated with net sediment transport patterns: An example from the Belgian continental shelf
TL;DR: Grain size trends in relation to net sediment transport pathways are examined, using some commonly-used grain size parameters. as discussed by the authors showed that grain size trends associated with a worsening in sorting along the transport pathways have little similarity to transport pathways.
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Trustworthy reuse of health data: A transnational perspective
Antoine Geissbuhler,Charles Safran,Iain Buchan,Riccardo Bellazzi,Steven E. Labkoff,Kristin L. Eilenberg,A Leese,C Richardson,John Mantas,Peter J. Murray,G. De Moor +10 more
TL;DR: A failure to work jointly across the stakeholders on common policy frameworks will forego a crucial opportunity to boost key EU markets and counter global competition and the lack of harmonized policy across EU nations for trustworthy reuse of health data risks patient safety.
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Privacy enhancing techniques - the key to secure communication and management of clinical and genomic data.
TL;DR: Some of the privacy protection problems related to genomics based medicine and the relevance of Trusted Third Parties and Privacy Enhancing Techniques in the restricted context of clinical research and statistics are introduced.
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The distinction between linguistic and conceptual semantics in medical terminology and its implication for NLP-based knowledge acquisition.
TL;DR: It is argued that in a multilingual environment, linguistic ontologies should be designed as interfaces between domain conceptualizations and linguistic knowledge bases and described how the distinction between conceptual and linguistic semantics may assist in reaching this objective.