BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making (Dec 2020)

A community effort for automatic detection of postictal generalized EEG suppression in epilepsy

  • Yejin Kim,
  • Xiaoqian Jiang,
  • Samden D. Lhatoo,
  • Guo-Qiang Zhang,
  • Shiqiang Tao,
  • Licong Cui,
  • Xiaojin Li,
  • Robert D. Jolly,
  • Luyao Chen,
  • Michael Phan,
  • Cung Ha,
  • Marijane Detranaltes,
  • Jiajie Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12911-020-01306-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. S12
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Applying machine learning to healthcare sheds light on evidence-based decision making and has shown promises to improve healthcare by combining clinical knowledge and biomedical data. However, medicine and data science are not synchronized. Oftentimes, researchers with a strong data science background do not understand the clinical challenges, while on the other hand, physicians do not know the capacity and limitation of state-of-the-art machine learning methods. The difficulty boils down to the lack of a common interface between two highly intelligent communities due to the privacy concerns and the disciplinary gap. The School of Biomedical Informatics (SBMI) at UTHealth is a pilot in connecting both worlds to promote interdisciplinary research. Recently, the Center for Secure Artificial Intelligence For hEalthcare (SAFE) at SBMI is organizing a series of machine learning healthcare hackathons for real-world clinical challenges. We hosted our first Hackathon themed centered around Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy and finding ways to recognize the warning signs. This community effort demonstrated that interdisciplinary discussion and productive competition has significantly increased the accuracy of warning sign detection compared to the previous work, and ultimately showing a potential of this hackathon as a platform to connect the two communities of data science and medicine.

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