Intelligence and Security Informatics: Biosurveillance Second NSF Workshop, BioSurveillance 2007, New Brunswick, NJ, USA, May 22, 2007, Proceedings / [electronic resource] :
edited by Daniel Zeng, Ivan Gotham, Ken Komatsu, Cecil Lynch, Mark Thurmond, David Madigan, Bill Lober, James Kvach, Hsinchun Chen.
- 1st ed. 2007.
- XI, 234 p. online resource.
- Information Systems and Applications, incl. Internet/Web, and HCI, 4506 2946-1642 ; .
- Information Systems and Applications, incl. Internet/Web, and HCI, 4506 .
Long Papers -- Early Outbreak Detection Using an Automated Data Feed of Test Orders from a Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory -- Chinese Chief Complaint Classification for Syndromic Surveillance -- Incorporating Geographical Contacts into Social Network Analysis for Contact Tracing in Epidemiology: A Study on Taiwan SARS Data -- A Model for Characterizing Annual Flu Cases -- Population Dynamics in the Elderly: The Need for Age-Adjustment in National BioSurveillance Systems -- Data Classification for Selection of Temporal Alerting Methods for Biosurveillance -- High Performance Computing for Disease Surveillance -- Towards Real Time Epidemiology: Data Assimilation, Modeling and Anomaly Detection of Health Surveillance Data Streams -- Algorithm Combination for Improved Performance in Biosurveillance Systems -- Decoupling Temporal Aberration Detection Algorithms for Enhanced Biosurveillance -- Assessing Seasonal Variation in Multisource Surveillance Data: Annual Harmonic Regression -- A Study into Detection of Bio-Events in Multiple Streams of Surveillance Data -- A Web-Based System for Infectious Disease Data Integration and Sharing: Evaluating Outcome, Task Performance Efficiency, User Information Satisfaction, and Usability -- Public Health Affinity Domain: A Standards-Based Surveillance System Solution -- The Influenza Data Summary: A Prototype Application for Visualizing National Influenza Activity -- Global Foot-and-Mouth Disease Surveillance Using BioPortal -- Utilization of Predictive Mathematical Epidemiological Modeling in Crisis Preparedness Exercises -- Short Papers -- Ambulatory e-Prescribing: Evaluating a Novel Surveillance Data Source -- Detecting the Start of the Flu Season -- Syndromic Surveillance for Early Detection of Nosocomial Outbreaks -- A Bayesian Biosurveillance Method That Models Unknown Outbreak Diseases -- Spatial Epidemic Patterns Recognition Using Computer Algebra -- Detecting Conserved RNA Secondary Structures in Viral Genomes: The RADAR Approach -- Extended Abstracts -- Gemina: A Web-Based Epidemiology and Genomic Metadata System Designed to Identify Infectious Agents -- Internet APRS Data Utilization for Biosurveillance Applications.
The 2007 NSF BioSurveillance Workshop (BioSurveillance 2007) was built on the success of the first NSF BioSurveillance Workshop, hosted by the University of Arizona's NSF BioPortal Center in March 2006. BioSurveillance 2007 brought - gether infectious disease informatics (IDI) researchers and practitioners to discuss selected topics directly relevant to data sharing and analysis for real-time animal and public health surveillance. These researchers and practitioners represented a wide range of backgrounds including but not limited to epidemiology, statistics, applied mathematics, information systems, computer science and machine learning/data mining. BioSurveillance 2007 aimed to achieve the following objectives: (a) review and examine various real-time data sharing approaches for animal and public health s- veillance from both technological and policy perspectives; (b) identify key technical challenges facing syndromic surveillance for both animal and human diseases, and discuss and compare related systems approaches and algorithms; and (c) provide a forum to bring together IDI researchers and practitioners to identify future research opportunities. We are pleased that we received many outstanding contributions from IDI research groups and practitioners from around the world. The one-day program included one invited presentation, 17 long papers, six short papers, and two posters. BioSurveillance 2007 was jointly hosted by: the University of Arizona; University of California, Davis; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; and the University of Washington.
9783540726081
10.1007/978-3-540-72608-1 doi
Application software.
Data mining.
Computer networks .
Bioinformatics.
Computers and civilization.
Electronic data processing--Management.
Computer and Information Systems Applications.
Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery.
Computer Communication Networks.
Computational and Systems Biology.
Computers and Society.
IT Operations.
QA76.76.A65
005.3
Long Papers -- Early Outbreak Detection Using an Automated Data Feed of Test Orders from a Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory -- Chinese Chief Complaint Classification for Syndromic Surveillance -- Incorporating Geographical Contacts into Social Network Analysis for Contact Tracing in Epidemiology: A Study on Taiwan SARS Data -- A Model for Characterizing Annual Flu Cases -- Population Dynamics in the Elderly: The Need for Age-Adjustment in National BioSurveillance Systems -- Data Classification for Selection of Temporal Alerting Methods for Biosurveillance -- High Performance Computing for Disease Surveillance -- Towards Real Time Epidemiology: Data Assimilation, Modeling and Anomaly Detection of Health Surveillance Data Streams -- Algorithm Combination for Improved Performance in Biosurveillance Systems -- Decoupling Temporal Aberration Detection Algorithms for Enhanced Biosurveillance -- Assessing Seasonal Variation in Multisource Surveillance Data: Annual Harmonic Regression -- A Study into Detection of Bio-Events in Multiple Streams of Surveillance Data -- A Web-Based System for Infectious Disease Data Integration and Sharing: Evaluating Outcome, Task Performance Efficiency, User Information Satisfaction, and Usability -- Public Health Affinity Domain: A Standards-Based Surveillance System Solution -- The Influenza Data Summary: A Prototype Application for Visualizing National Influenza Activity -- Global Foot-and-Mouth Disease Surveillance Using BioPortal -- Utilization of Predictive Mathematical Epidemiological Modeling in Crisis Preparedness Exercises -- Short Papers -- Ambulatory e-Prescribing: Evaluating a Novel Surveillance Data Source -- Detecting the Start of the Flu Season -- Syndromic Surveillance for Early Detection of Nosocomial Outbreaks -- A Bayesian Biosurveillance Method That Models Unknown Outbreak Diseases -- Spatial Epidemic Patterns Recognition Using Computer Algebra -- Detecting Conserved RNA Secondary Structures in Viral Genomes: The RADAR Approach -- Extended Abstracts -- Gemina: A Web-Based Epidemiology and Genomic Metadata System Designed to Identify Infectious Agents -- Internet APRS Data Utilization for Biosurveillance Applications.
The 2007 NSF BioSurveillance Workshop (BioSurveillance 2007) was built on the success of the first NSF BioSurveillance Workshop, hosted by the University of Arizona's NSF BioPortal Center in March 2006. BioSurveillance 2007 brought - gether infectious disease informatics (IDI) researchers and practitioners to discuss selected topics directly relevant to data sharing and analysis for real-time animal and public health surveillance. These researchers and practitioners represented a wide range of backgrounds including but not limited to epidemiology, statistics, applied mathematics, information systems, computer science and machine learning/data mining. BioSurveillance 2007 aimed to achieve the following objectives: (a) review and examine various real-time data sharing approaches for animal and public health s- veillance from both technological and policy perspectives; (b) identify key technical challenges facing syndromic surveillance for both animal and human diseases, and discuss and compare related systems approaches and algorithms; and (c) provide a forum to bring together IDI researchers and practitioners to identify future research opportunities. We are pleased that we received many outstanding contributions from IDI research groups and practitioners from around the world. The one-day program included one invited presentation, 17 long papers, six short papers, and two posters. BioSurveillance 2007 was jointly hosted by: the University of Arizona; University of California, Davis; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; and the University of Washington.
9783540726081
10.1007/978-3-540-72608-1 doi
Application software.
Data mining.
Computer networks .
Bioinformatics.
Computers and civilization.
Electronic data processing--Management.
Computer and Information Systems Applications.
Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery.
Computer Communication Networks.
Computational and Systems Biology.
Computers and Society.
IT Operations.
QA76.76.A65
005.3