Results 201 to 210 of about 67,480 (257)

Teaching decision making to medical undergraduates by computer‐assisted learning

Medical Education, 1977
Summary Undergraduate medical students improve their ability to make patient management decisions through using computer‐assisted learning. With this problem‐solving approach an improvement in their factual knowledge also occurs and they retain a significant amount of the content.
T S Murray, J H Barber, W R Dunn
exaly   +3 more sources

Reliability and Integrity of Computer Assisted Decision Making Process

IFAC Postprint Volumes IPPV / International Federation of Automatic Control, 1985
Abstract Computer Assisted Decision Making (CADM) is finding its use more and more both in engineering and service industries. In our daily life real intelligence is being rapidly replaced by artificial intelligence (AI) This explosion of AI demands a heavy emphasis on meeting the expectations and requirements of all four components of CADM process ...
exaly   +2 more sources

Computer-Assisted Decision Making in Medicine

Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 1984
This article reviews the strengths and limitations of five major paradigms of medical computer-assisted decision making (CADM): (1) clinical algorithms, (2) statistical analysis of collections of patient data, (3) mathematical models of physical processes, (4) decision analysis, and (5) symbolic reasoning or artificial intelligence (AI).
J C, Kunz   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Computer Assisted Clinical Decision Making

Journal of Social Service Research, 1983
The Databank of Program Evaluations (DOPE) is an experimental, on-line, telephone accessible, computerized system for acquiring citations and abstracts of treatment evaluation studies that are catalogued by type of client, type of setting, and type of treatment.
Leonard E. Gibbs, David J. Johnson
openaire   +1 more source

An Introduction to Computer-Assisted medical Decision Making I

1987
A fifty-year-old executive is brought to the emergency room of his local hospital, having been unable to speak or move his right arm or leg for the past hour. Gradually, he returns to normal. The physician suspects a transient ischemic attack. She turns to her desk-top computer and activates a decision support system designed to help her diagnose and ...
S, Tuhrim, J A, Reggia
openaire   +3 more sources

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