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Generic queries for meeting clinical information needs.

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TLDR
A model for automated information retrieval in which questions posed by clinical users are analyzed to establish common syntactic and semantic patterns that are used to develop a set of general-purpose questions called generic queries is described.
Abstract
This paper describes a model for automated information retrieval in which questions posed by clinical users are analyzed to establish common syntactic and semantic patterns. The patterns are used to develop a set of general-purpose questions called generic queries. These generic queries are used in responding to specific clinical information needs. Users select generic queries in one of two ways. The user may type in questions, which are then analyzed, using natural language processing techniques, to identify the most relevant generic query; or the user may indicate patient data of interest and then pick one of several potentially relevant questions. Once the query and medical concepts have been determined, an information source is selected automatically, a retrieval strategy is composed and executed, and the results are sorted and filtered for presentation to the user. This work makes extensive use of the National Library of Medicine's Unified Medical Language System (UMLS): medical concepts are derived from the Metathesaurus, medical queries are based on semantic relations drawn from the UMLS Semantic Network, and automated source selection makes use of the Information Sources Map. The paper describes research currently under way to implement this model and reports on experience and results to date.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Unified Medical Language System.

TL;DR: The UMLS project and current developments in high-speed, high-capacity international networks are converging in ways that have great potential for enhancing access to biomedical information.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Unified Medical Language System

TL;DR: The UMLS project and current developments in high-speed, high-capacity international networks are converging in ways that have great potential for enhancing access to biomedical information.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of questions asked by family doctors regarding patient care

TL;DR: Questions about patient care can be organised into a limited number of generic types, which could help guide the efforts of knowledge base developers.
Journal ArticleDOI

A taxonomy of generic clinical questions: classification study

TL;DR: A moderate degree of interrater reliability was achieved with the taxonomy developed in this study, which may enhance the understanding of doctors' information needs and improve the ability to meet those needs.
Journal Article

The UMLS project: making the conceptual connection between users and the information they need

TL;DR: Medical librarians are involved heavily in the direction of the UMLS project, in the development of the Knowledge Sources, and in their experimental application, increasing the likelihood that the U MLS project will achieve its goal of improving access to machine-readable biomedical information.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Information needs in office practice: are they being met?

TL;DR: The self-reported information needs of 47 physicians during a half day of typical office practice were studied, and physicians raised 269 questions about patient management, related to all medical specialties and were highly specific to the individual patient's problem.
Journal ArticleDOI

TEAM: an experiment in the design of transportable natural-language interfaces

TL;DR: Several general problems of natural-language processing that were faced in constructing the TEAM system are discussed, including quantifier scoping, various pragmatic issues, and verb acquisition.
Journal ArticleDOI

An efficient easily adaptable system for interpreting natural language queries

TL;DR: This paper gives an overall account of a prototype natural language question answering system, called Chat-80, designed to be both efficient and easily adaptable to a variety of applications.
Proceedings Article

Transportability and generality in a natural-language interface system

TL;DR: The discussion of TEAM shows how domain-independent and domain-dependent information can be separated in the different components of a NL interface system, and presents one method of obtaining domain-specific information from a domain expert.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Searching for information in a hypertext medical handbook

TL;DR: This approach responds to a query by initially treating each hypertext card as a full-text document, which utilizes information about document structure to propagate weights to neighboring cards and produces a ranked list of potential starting points for graphical browsing.
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