9. Connect users to insights
precisely at their
moment of need
any format, any platform
advanced connectors and AI enrichment,
surfaced by one or more applications via App Studio
AIAI
System Generated
Human Generated
Application Generated
AI
Fusion
Data
Digital Workplace
Solution
12. SLIDE: 12
Things to Consider
• Search interface is ubiquitous – so start with search
• Mix AI and Search
• AI should includes Machine Learning, Deep Learning, Natural Language Processing
• Look for “Open core” – explainable AI – avoid the “black box”
• Understand your data: mislabeled, unlabeled, many formats
• Look for specific challenges and ask vendors to help you solve them
• Guide the regulators –
• Be proactive
Why should people care?
How does this help them?
What tasks can they complete once they are finished reading this?
Good morning – As Cindy mentioned, myname is diane burley vice president of content for Lucidworks
About 25 years ago I was a reporter and editor.
Then something big happened in 2007 – any ideas?
The iphone changed how people want to interact – and have trained an entire generation of workers and patients to want to ask questions and log information into their phone. In the clinical trials arena – patients can track health stats with wearable devices, they can report on the fly into their iphone. In fact they can dictate it as well. Which is why doctors are all running around hospitals with their iphones driving their IT departments nuts.
So what does this mean?
People want what they want when they want.
Clinical trial appsThe newly-launched ResearchKit contains five different apps for specific clinical trial areas including post-breast cancer treatment symptoms, asthma, Parkinson's, glucose levels, and risk factors for cardiovascular disease.
peaking in a CNBC TV interview, the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine's Kathryn Schmitz emphasized the potentially revolutionary impact of Apple's new ResearchKit system on health services researchers' clinical trial projects.
University of Pennsylvania Professor of Epidem-iology and LDI Senior Fellow Kathryn Schmitzappeared on CNBC to discuss her developmentwork on an app for Apple's new ResearchKitproduct.ResearchKit is one of several new Apple products designed to work with the wearable biometrics monitoring systems built into both the latest iPhones and the company's new Apple Watch. ResearchKit is a centralized data infrastructure that enables research teams to design and operate apps that can efficiently collect, process and analyze daily biometric data from research subjects.
Clinical trial appsThe newly-launched ResearchKit contains five different apps for specific clinical trial areas including post-breast cancer treatment symptoms, asthma, Parkinson's, glucose levels, and risk factors for cardiovascular disease.
Schmitz, PhD, MPH, a Professor of Epidemiology at Perelman School of Medicine and a Senior Fellow at Penn's Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics (LDI), is one of a four-member team who worked with Apple to create the new post-breast cancer treatment symptoms app called Share the Journey. The other three members were Patricia Ganz, MD, of UCLA's Comprehensive Cancer Center; Ann Partridge, MD, MPH, of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Harvard Medical School; and Stephen Friend, MD, PhD, of Sage Bionetworks, a non-profit research center in Seattle.
The launch of the 'Health' app whose namewas later changed to 'HealthBook' was thestart of Apple's aggressive move into themobile health monitoring market.The app, which has a webpage recruiting its first round of clinical trial participants, is designed to study the post-treatment symptoms of breast cancer, how they vary over time, and what can be Done to address them more effectively to improve the life of breast cancer patients.