Every complex scientific field needs an ontology, and soon the primary one that covers COVID-19 will be easier for medication and vaccination researchers to understand, using new interpretive methods and software developed by experts at NJIT’s Ying Wu College of Computing. Ontologies are essentially dictionaries and maps of medical terms. Terms with the same meaning, such as cardiac arrest and myocardial infarction, are grouped together. Each group is called a concept. Concepts in turn are connected to each other using arrows and boxes to indicate which are general and which are specific. New concepts are often called children and older ones are parents, as in genealogy. To read the full story.
Recent Posts
- Kids under 5 are grabbing their parents’ vapes and getting sick at record levels, researchers say.
- These N.J. medical schools are among some of the best in the country. See how they rank.
- Estrogen Patch Shortages Are Ongoing—Here’s Where to Find Them and What to Ask Your Doctor.
- Toddlers are getting their hands on e-cigarettes and inhaling at an alarming rate, new Rutgers study shows.
- Rutgers deans: We train advanced practice nurses for N.J. Our laws send them elsewhere.
Categories
- Community (2,496)
- Covid (1,001)
- CTO Events (6)
- News (3,168)
- Pilots (21)