1 / 9

Developing an XML based Intermediate Language with Application to the Health Care Domain

Developing an XML based Intermediate Language with Application to the Health Care Domain. Anne I. Mannette-Wright May 5, 2006. Agenda . What is my topic? Why is it important? Current status Next steps until July 8 th. Topic Idea. Pattern idea of using an “Intermediate Language” (IL)

temira
Download Presentation

Developing an XML based Intermediate Language with Application to the Health Care Domain

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Developing an XML based Intermediate Languagewith Application to the Health Care Domain Anne I. Mannette-Wright May 5, 2006

  2. Agenda • What is my topic? • Why is it important? • Current status • Next steps until July 8th 2

  3. Topic Idea • Pattern idea of using an “Intermediate Language” (IL) • Linguistic • Computing • Currency • XML is the “meta” IL of the WWW • But….XML Schemas are different for different documents • Need to write an XSLT program for every source to target XML Schema transformation 3

  4. Topic Idea • Use XSLT (or some other mechanism) for IL • Apply to domain of medical data 4

  5. Why is it Important? • Elimination of point-to-point transformations that currently have to be done in the document processing/exchange domain. • Further increase the reuse of XML documents by vastly reducing the effort, time and cost to transform one document structured using one XML schema to another XML document using a different XML schema. • Future application of this research to other domains other than the health care industry. 5

  6. Work already done • Pattern idea – found it existed • Transformation of XML documents • found a number of methods • All methods at direct transformation level; none are N to M • Medical data transformation • Electronic Healthcare record (HER) standards are currently under development • Health Level 7 (HL7) appears to be the “leading” standard • HL7 standard does not address the medical data transformation problem 6

  7. Work Planned: Now to July 8th • Look at lower level transformation method(s) using XSLT • Apply to standardized IL • Uses in medical data transformation • Where and what problems can it solve 7

  8. References • Bobung, Sebastian, “Semi-auotmatic discovery of mapping rules to match XML Schemas”, Department of Computer Science, The University of Auckland, November 25, 2003. • Boyd, Michael, Kittivoravitkul, Sasivimol, Lazanitis, Charalambos, “AutoMed: A BAV Data Integration System for Heterogeneous Data Sources”, Lecture Notes In Computer Science, 2004, Springer-Verlag GmbH, Volume 3084 / 2004, Advanced Information Systems Engineering: 16th International Conference, Proceedings CAiSE 2004, Riga, Latvia, June 7-11, 2004. • Corre, Alan D., “A Glossary of Lingua Franca – Introduction”, obtained from http://www.uwm.edu/~corre/franca/edition2/lingua.2.html • Cruz, L.F., Xiao, X., Hsu, F., “An Ontology-based Framework for XML Semantic Integration”, Proceedings IDEAS’04, pages 217-226, 2004. • Eichleberg, Marcio, Aden, Thomas, Riesmeier, Jorg, “A Survey and Analysis of Electronic Healthcare Record Standards”, ACM Computing Surveys, Vol.37, No.4, December 2005, pp.277-315. • Ek, Merja, Hakkarainen, Kilpelainen, Pakka, Penttinen, Tommi, “Declarative XML Wrapping of Data”, report A/2002/2, University of Kuopio, Department of Computer Science and Applied Mathematics, Kuopio, Finland. • Foote, Brian, Roberts, Don, “Lingua Franca”, Fifth Conference of Pattern Languages of programs (PLoP’98), Monticello, Illinois, August 1998. • Kuikka, Eila, Leinonen, Paula, Panttonen, Martti, “Towards Automating of Document Structure Transformations”, DocEng’02, November 8-9, 2002, McLean, Virginia, U.S.A.. • Lehti, Patirck, Frankhauser, Peter, “XML Data Integration with OWL: Experiences & Challenges”, Proceedings of the 2004 Symposium on Applications and the Internet (SAINT’04), pages 160 – 167. • Patterson, Grace I., Shepherd, Michael, Wang, Xiaaoli, Watters, Carolyn, Zitner, David, “Using the XML-based Clinical Document Architecture for Exchange of Structured Discharge Summaries”, Proceedings of the 35th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2002. 8

  9. References • Pottinger, Rachel A., Bernstein, Philip A., “Merging Models Based on Given Correspondence”, Proceedings of the International Conference on Very Large Databases, 2003, pages 862-873. • Star Trek: The Next Generation Episode #502 obtained from: http://www.treknation.com/episodes/tng/ • Su, Hong, Kuno, Harumi, Rundensteiner, Elke A., “Automating the Transformation of XML Documents”, Workshop on Web Information and Data Management, Proceedings of the 3rd International workshop on Web information and data management, 2001, pages 68-75. • Thirunarayan, Krishnaprasad, “Applying XML/XSLT Technology: A Case Study”, Simulation Series, 2000, Vol.34, Part 2, pages 73-80. • Zamboulis, Lucas, Poulovassilis, Alexandra, “Information Sharing for the Semantic Web – a Schema Transformation Approach”, School of Computer Science and Information Sciences, Birkbeck College, University of London, London, June 30, 2005. 9

More Related