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Leveraging Social Media For Biomedical Research

How social media sites are rapidly doing unique research on large cohorts

It has become commonplace for people to use social media to share their healthcare stories, seek a community of individuals with the same diseases, and learn about treatment options. All this...
ALS, clinical trials, GWAS, Parkinsons, social media
Jan, 02, 2012
Personalized Cancer Treatment: Seeking Cures Through Computation

Incremental progress and measured successes

Personalized cancer therapy is now a reality. A handful of tumor-classifying tests and targeted drugs are in widespread clinical use; and early attempts are underway to match high-risk cancer...
Califano, cancer, Cancer Genome Atlas, G-DOC, network analysis, systems biology
Jan, 02, 2012
Point/Counterpoint: Clinical Data Repositories: Less than meets the eye OR More valuable than you'd expect?
POINT/ Less than meets the eye                                             ...
Oct, 05, 2012
COMPUTATION FOR THE BEDSIDE: Optimizing Patient Care

How some tools are already impacting patients

Medical decision-making is often more art than science, requiring physicians to exercise judgment in the face of complex factual circumstances. But now a few tools offer the opportunity to...
AIDS, bone, kidney transplant
Apr, 01, 2011
BIOSURVEILLANCE: From Text-mining to Freakidemiology

Researchers are expanding the types of data that can be used to predict infectious disease spread; developing novel ways to analyze that data; and trying to create systems that can help address public health problems today

American officials are seeking better ways to anticipate public health crises following ten years that have seen outbreaks of SARS, avian flu, H1N1, West Nile virus, cholera and, most recently,...
biosurveillance
Apr, 01, 2011
Getting It Right: Better Validation Key to Progress in Biomedical Computing

Bringing models closer to reality

When the ill-fated space shuttle Columbia launched on January 16, 2003, a large piece of foam fell off and hit the left wing. Alerted of the impact, NASA engineers used a computer model to predict...
7009, competitions, outsource, self-assessment, validation
Oct, 19, 2012
Human Versus Machine: Biomedical expertise meets computer automation

Computers and human experts duke it out over who is better at diagnosing disease, interpreting images, or predicting protein structure

Dorothy Rosenthal tenses over her microscope, peering at the problematic nucleus on the Pap smear yet again. “It’s abnormal,” she decides, and then hesitates. “No, it’s...
Jul, 01, 2006
Smart Embedded Devices: Here They Come

Machine learning for an artificial pancreas and deep brain stimulation

Embedded medical devices that both detect symptoms and treat them have existed for decades. Take, for example, the heart pacemaker. But a new generation of implants could soon emerge to do something...
diabetes, epilepsy, machine learning, pancreas, Parkinsons
Oct, 19, 2012
Microarrays: The Search For Meaning in a Vast Sea of Data

They've gone from hype to backlash. Now it's time for reality: How microarrays are being used to benefit healthcare

When DNA microarray technology emerged more than a decade ago, it was met with unbridled enthusiasm. By allowing scientists to look at the expression of enormous numbers of genes in the genome...
Oct, 01, 2006
Biocomputation Startups: Where Does Value Lie?

An opportunity and a challenge

When discussing biocomputation startups, there’s one thing people agree on: These days, they don’t generate much excitement among venture capitalists.   “In the 1990s, there...
Apr, 01, 2007
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