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projects:workgroups:wg_meeting_sep_08_2021 [2021/10/05 14:07]
vipina [Invited talk]
projects:workgroups:wg_meeting_sep_08_2021 [2021/11/09 04:48] (current)
vipina [Recording]
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 ==== Invited talk ==== ==== Invited talk ====
-**Title: ​Leveraging longitudinal ​and multi-modal EHR in Survival Analysis**\\ +**Title: ​Natural Language Processing for Clinical Excellence: The State of Practices, Opportunities, ​and Challenges:** Rapid growth in adoption of electronic health records (EHRs) has led to an unprecedented expansion in the availability of large longitudinal datasets. Large initiatives such as the Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) Network, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Network (PCORNet), and the Observational Health Data Science and Informatics (OHDSI) consortium, have been established and have reported successful applications of secondary use of EHRs in clinical research and practice. In these applications,​ natural language processing (NLP) technologies have played a crucial role as much of detailed patient information in EHRs is embedded in narrative clinical documents. Meanwhile, a number of clinical NLP systems, such as MedLEE, MetaMap/​MetaMap Lite, cTAKES, MedTagger, and i2b2 have been developed and utilized to extract useful information from diverse types of clinical text, such as clinical notes, radiology reports, and pathology reports. This talk will walk through some successful applications of NLP techniques in the clinical domain with potential opportunities and challenges.
-**Abstract:** Rapid growth in adoption of electronic health records (EHRs) has led to an unprecedented expansion in the availability of large longitudinal datasets. Large initiatives such as the Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) Network, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Network (PCORNet), and the Observational Health Data Science and Informatics (OHDSI) consortium, have been established and have reported successful applications of secondary use of EHRs in clinical research and practice. In these applications,​ natural language processing (NLP) technologies have played a crucial role as much of detailed patient information in EHRs is embedded in narrative clinical documents. Meanwhile, a number of clinical NLP systems, such as MedLEE, MetaMap/​MetaMap Lite, cTAKES, MedTagger, and i2b2 have been developed and utilized to extract useful information from diverse types of clinical text, such as clinical notes, radiology reports, and pathology reports. This talk will walk through some successful applications of NLP techniques in the clinical domain with potential opportunities and challenges.+
  
-**Presenter:​** Dr. Yifan Peng\\ +**Presenter:​** Dr. Yanshan Wang\\ 
-Dr. Peng is an assistant professor ​at the Department of Population ​Health ​Sciences ​at Weill Cornell Medicine. His main research interests ​include BioNLP ​and medical image analysissuch as named entity recognitioninformation extraction, and eye disease diagnosis ​and prognosisBefore ​joining ​Cornell Medicine, Dr. Peng was a research fellow at the National Center ​for Biotechnology Information ​(NCBI), National Library of Medicine ​(NLM), National Institutes of Health (NIH). He obtained his Ph.Ddegree from the University of DelawareDuring his doctoral training, he investigated applications of machine learning in biomedical relation extraction, with a focus on deep analysis of the linguistic structures of biomedical texts.+Yanshan Wang, PhD, FAMIA is vice chair of Research and assistant professor ​within ​the Department of Health ​Information Management ​at the University of Pittsburgh. His research interests ​focus on artificial intelligence (AI), natural language processing (NLP) and machine/​deep learning methodologies and applications in health care. His research goal is to leverage different dimensions of data and data-driven computational approaches to meet the needs of cliniciansresearcherspatients ​and customersPrior to joining ​Pitt, Dr. Wang was assistant professor in the Department of AI & Informatics at Mayo Clinic. Yanshan has extensive collaborative research experience with physicians, epidemiology researchers,​ statisticians,​ NLP researchers,​ and IT technicians. He has served as investigators ​for multiple extramural NIH-funded projects and intramural operational projects. He has published over 50 peer-reviewed articles in high-impact medical informatics journals ​(e.g., JBI, JAMIA), and conferences ​(e.g., AMIA Annual Symposium, AMIA summit, IEEE BIBM). Dr. Wang is also active in organizing conference workshops and shared tasks in the medical informatics communityincluding the international ​Health ​NLP workshops and the national NLP clinical challenge ​(n2c2). 
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 +==== Recording ==== 
 + 
 +[[https://​ohdsiorg.sharepoint.com/:​v:/​r/​sites/​Workgroup-NLPNaturalLanguageProcessing/​Shared%20Documents/​General/​Recordings/​Fwd_%20OHDSI%20NLP%20WG%20Monthly%20Meeting-20210908_130210-Meeting%20Recording.mp4?​csf=1&​web=1&​e=R7rBkZ|Click here to watch the recorded meeting]]
  
projects/workgroups/wg_meeting_sep_08_2021.1633442876.txt.gz · Last modified: 2021/10/05 14:07 by vipina