3.18.05
NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING FOR CLINICAL APPLICATIONS: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES
Carol Friedman, PhD
Professor of Biomedical Informatics
Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons
About the Speaker:Carol Friedman, PhD
Dr. Friedman is an internationally recognized expert on the use of advanced natural language processing techniques to extract, structure and encode information in clinical documents. She has developed the MedLEE system, which is used in a variety of medical domains to extract clinical, biomolecular and genetic information from biomedical documents. She is a Fellow of the American College of Medical Informatics.
Abstract:
Clinical data is critical to patient care, yet most patient information is
in the form of text and, therefore, cannot be utilized by automated
processes. Natural language processing (NLP) is a method that transforms
text into structured encoded data, which is a form that can be reliably
accessed by clinical applications needed to improve the health care
process. This talk will discuss opportunities and challenges for NLP in
the clinical domain. In addition, we will present an overview of the
MedLEE NLP system that we developed as well as demonstrate automated clinical applications based on use of MedLEE.
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