A global optimisation approach to classification in medical diagnosis and prognosis
- Authors: Bagirov, Adil , Rubinov, Alex , Yearwood, John , Stranieri, Andrew
- Date: 2001
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at 34th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, HICSS-34, Maui, Hawaii, USA : 3rd-6th January 2001
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- Description: In this paper global optimisation-based techniques are studied in order to increase the accuracy of medical diagnosis and prognosis with FNA image data from the Wisconsin Diagnostic and Prognostic Breast Cancer databases. First we discuss the problem of determining the most informative features for the classification of cancerous cases in the databases under consideration. Then we apply a technique based on convex and global optimisation to breast cancer diagnosis. It allows the classification of benign cases and malignant ones and the subsequent diagnosis of patients with very high accuracy. The third application of this technique is a method that calculates centres of clusters to predict when breast cancer is likely to recur in patients for which cancer has been removed. The technique achieves higher accuracy with these databases than reported elsewhere in the literature.
- Description: 2003003950
Group decision making in health care : A case study of multidisciplinary meetings
- Authors: Sharma, Vishakha , Stranieri, Andrew , Burstein, Frada , Warren, Jim , Daly, Sharon , Patterson, Louise , Yearwood, John , Wolff, Alan
- Date: 2016
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Journal of Decision Systems Vol. 25, no. (2016), p. 476-485
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- Description: Abstract: Recent studies have demonstrated that Multi-Disciplinary Meetings (MDM) practiced in some medical contexts can contribute to positive health care outcomes. The group reasoning and decision-making in MDMs has been found to be most effective when deliberations revolve around the patient’s needs, comprehensive information is available during the meeting, core members attend and the MDM is effectively facilitated. This article presents a case study of the MDMs in cancer care in a region of Australia. The case study draws on a group reasoning model called the Reasoning Community model to analyse MDM deliberations to illustrate that many factors are important to support group reasoning, not solely the provision of pertinent information. The case study has implications for the use of data analytics in any group reasoning context. © 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.