Elsevier

Artificial Intelligence in Medicine

Volume 14, Issues 1–2, September–October 1998, Pages 29-51
Artificial Intelligence in Medicine

The Asgaard project: a task-specific framework for the application and critiquing of time-oriented clinical guidelines

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0933-3657(98)00015-3Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open archive

Abstract

Clinical guidelines can be viewed as generic skeletal-plan schemata that represent clinical procedural knowledge and that are instantiated and refined dynamically by care providers over significant time periods. In the Asgaard project, we are investigating a set of tasks that support the application of clinical guidelines by a care provider other than the guideline's designer. We are focusing on the application of the guideline, recognition of care providers' intentions from their actions, and critique of care providers' actions given the guideline and the patient's medical record. We are developing methods that perform these tasks in multiple clinical domains, given an instance of a properly represented clinical guideline and an electronic medical patient record. In this paper, we point out the precise domain-specific knowledge required by each method, such as the explicit intentions of the guideline designer (represented as temporal patterns to be achieved or avoided). We present a machine-readable language, called Asbru, to represent and to annotate guidelines based on the task-specific ontology. We also introduce an automated tool for the acquisition of clinical guidelines based on the same ontology, developed using the PROTÉGÉ-II framework.

Keywords

Knowledge representation
Knowledge acquisition
Planning
Temporal reasoning
Clinical guidelines
Critiquing
Plan recognition

Cited by (0)