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A pioneer in the use of artificial intelligence in healthcare was American biomedical informatician Edward H. Shortliffe. This field deals with utilization of machine-learning algorithms and artificial intelligence, to emulate human cognition in the analysis, interpretation, and comprehension of complicated medical and healthcare data.
James J. "Jim" Cimino is an American physician-scientist and biomedical informatician.He is Professor of Medicine and Director of the Informatics Institute at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine and Adjunct Professor of Biomedical Informatics at Columbia University.
Eneida A. Mendonça, is a Brazilian-born physician-scientist and biomedical informatician.She pioneered the use of natural language processing in both the biomedical literature and in electronic medical record narratives in order to identify knowledge relevant to medical decision making in the context of the patient care.
McCoy is a biomedical informatician specializing in applied clinical informatics. She was an assistant professor at the University of Texas School of Biomedical Informatics and at the Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine's department of global biostatistics and data science.
Greenes won the Borden Research Prize from Harvard for his medical school thesis on computer-based interactive discourse design. Greenes is a member of the National Academy of Medicine, [7] Distinguished Fellow [8] and 2008 Morris F. Collen Award Recipient in the American College of Medical Informatics, [9] [10] and Fellow of the American College of Radiology [11] and Society of Imaging ...
Edward ("Ted") Hance Shortliffe (born 1947) is a Canadian-born American biomedical informatician, physician, and computer scientist. Shortliffe is a pioneer in the use of artificial intelligence in medicine.
Jason H. Moore is a translational bioinformatics scientist, biomedical informatician, and human geneticist, the Edward Rose Professor of Informatics and Director of the Institute for Biomedical Informatics at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, where he is also Senior Associate Dean for Informatics and Director of the Division of Informatics in the Department of ...
Christopher G. Chute is a Bloomberg Distinguished Professor at Johns Hopkins University, physician-scientist and biomedical informatician known for biomedical terminologies [1] and health information technology (IT) standards.