Controlled Vocabulary
Mostrando 13-24 de 49 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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13. Léxico e leitura em dois tempos de produção de um mesmo texto escrito: as fábulas em discussão
This Paper approaches textual-discursive production processes under the light of significant reading: the one that demobilizes<=>remobilizes the contents of cultural repertoires by socio<=>cognitive<=>interactive actions, whereby linearity limits of product text are broken and it is transformed into a process-text. The theoretical fundaments that permitted t
Publicado em: 2004
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14. Separate but equal? A system comparison study of MEDLINE's controlled vocabulary MeSH.
This study tested the effect of controlled vocabulary search feature implementation on two online systems. Specifically, the study examined retrieval rates using four unique controlled vocabulary search features (explode, major descriptor, descriptor, subheadings). Each search feature was applied to nine search queries obtained from a medical reference libra
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15. Evaluating the Coverage of Controlled Health Data Terminologies: Report on the Results of the NLM/AHCPR Large Scale Vocabulary Test
Objective: To determine the extent to which a combination of existing machine-readable health terminologies cover the concepts and terms needed for a comprehensive controlled vocabulary for health information systems by carrying out a distributed national experiment using the Internet and the UMLS Knowledge Sources, lexical programs, and server.
American Medical Informatics Association.
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16. Portability issues for a structured clinical vocabulary: mapping from Yale to the Columbia medical entities dictionary.
OBJECTIVE: To examine the issues involved in mapping an existing structured controlled vocabulary, the Medical Entities Dictionary (MED) developed at Columbia University, to an institutional vocabulary, the laboratory and pharmacy vocabularies of the Yale New Haven Medical Center. DESIGN: 200 Yale pharmacy terms and 200 Yale laboratory terms were randomly se
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17. Planned NLM/AHCPR large-scale vocabulary test: using UMLS technology to determine the extent to which controlled vocabularies cover terminology needed for health care and public health.
The National Library of Medicine (NLM) and the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) are sponsoring a test to determine the extent to which a combination of existing health-related terminologies covers vocabulary needed in health information systems. The test vocabularies are the 30 that are fully or partially represented in the 1996 edition of
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18. A continuous-speech interface to a decision support system: I. Techniques to accommodate for misrecognized input.
OBJECTIVE: Develop a continuous-speech interface that allows flexible input of clinical findings into a medical diagnostic application. DESIGN: The authors' program allows users to enter clinical findings using their own vernacular. It displays from the diagnostic program's controlled vocabulary a list of terms that most closely matches the input, and allows
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19. Controlled medical vocabulary construction: methods from the Canon Group.
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20. Searching biomedical databases on complementary medicine: the use of controlled vocabulary among authors, indexers and investigators
BioMed Central.
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21. Standards for Nursing Terminology
Terminology work in nursing has given rise to an increasing number of nursing terminologies. These generally take the form of controlled vocabularies. Because of the limitations of the controlled vocabulary approach, individual terminologies tend to be tuned to meet the specific needs of their intended users. Differences between terminologies are now a signi
American Medical Informatics Association.
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22. Variations in Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) mapping: from the natural language of patron terms to the controlled vocabulary of mapped lists*
Objectives: This study compared the mapping of natural language patron terms to the Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) across six MeSH interfaces for the MEDLINE database.
Medical Library Association.
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23. Updating the Read Codes: User-interactive Maintenance of a Dynamic Clinical Vocabulary
The Read Codes are a hierarchically-arranged controlled clinical vocabulary introduced in the early 1980s and now consisting of three maintained versions of differing complexity. The code sets are dynamic, and are updated quarterly in response to requests from users including clinicians in both primary and secondary care, software suppliers, and advice
American Medical Informatics Association.
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24. The Zebrafish Information Network (ZFIN): the zebrafish model organism database
The Zebrafish Information Network (ZFIN) is a web based community resource that serves as a centralized location for the curation and integration of zebrafish genetic, genomic and developmental data. ZFIN is publicly accessible at http://zfin.org. ZFIN provides an integrated representation of mutants, genes, genetic markers, mapping panels, publications and
Oxford University Press.