Benjamin S. Glicksberg
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
272 Papers
326 Citations
Benjamin S. Glicksberg is an academic researcher from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 182 publications. Previous affiliations of Benjamin S. Glicksberg include Hasso Plattner Institute & University of California, Berkeley.
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Papers
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Deep Learning with Heterogeneous Graph Embeddings for Mortality Prediction from Electronic Health Records.
TL;DR: In this article, a Heterogeneous Graph Model (HGM) was used to predict in-hospital mortality in the setting of an intensive care unit (ICU) using Electronic Health Record (EHR) data.
Correction to: Integrative analysis of loss-of-function variants in clinical and genomic data reveals novel genes associated with cardiovascular traits (BMC Medical Genomics DOI: 10.1186/s12920-019-0542-3)
Benjamin S. Glicksberg,Benjamin S. Glicksberg,Letizia Amadori,Nicholas K. Akers,Katyayani Sukhavasi,Oscar Franzén,Oscar Franzén,Li Li,Gillian M. Belbin,Kristin L. Ayers,Khader Shameer,Marcus A. Badgeley,Kipp W. Johnson,Ben Readhead,Bruce J. Darrow,Eimear E. Kenny,Christer Betsholtz,Raili Ermel,Josefin Skogsberg,Arno Ruusalepp,Eric E. Schadt,Joel T. Dudley,Hongxia Ren,Jason C. Kovacic,Chiara Giannarelli,Shuyu D. Li,Johan Björkegren,Rong Chen +27 more
Precision Medicine for Electrocardiogram Interpretation: Clinical Relevance, Challenges, and Advances
Kamran Namjouyan,E. Sejdić,Mark S. Link,A. Pelliccia,Benjamin S. Glicksberg,N. Trayanova,C. Krittanawong +6 more
TL;DR: This review presents a structured framework for ECG interpretation, integrating AI-enhanced analysis to improve diagnosis and patient outcomes for various cardiovascular conditions, including arrhythmias, ischemic injury, and structural remodeling.
Intestinal Host Response to SARS-CoV-2 Infection and COVID-19 Outcomes in Patients With Gastrointestinal Symptoms.
Alexandra E. Livanos,Divya Jha,Francesca Cossarini,Ana S. Gonzalez-Reiche,Minami Tokuyama,Teresa Aydillo,Tommaso Lorenzo Parigi,Mark S. Ladinsky,Irene Ramos,Katie A. Dunleavy,Brian T. Lee,Rebekah E. Dixon,Steven T. Chen,Gustavo Martinez-Delgado,Satish Nagula,Emily A. Bruce,Huaibin M. Ko,Benjamin S. Glicksberg,Girish N. Nadkarni,Elisabet Pujadas,Jason Reidy,Steven Naymagon,Ari Grinspan,Jawad Ahmad,Michael Tankelevich,Yaron Bram,Ronald E. Gordon,Keshav Sharma,Jane Houldsworth,Graham J. Britton,Alice Chen-Liaw,Matthew P. Spindler,Tamar Plitt,Pei Wang,Andrea Cerutti,Jeremiah J. Faith,Jean-Frederic Colombel,Ephraim Kenigsberg,Carmen Argmann,Miriam Merad,Sacha Gnjatic,Noam Harpaz,Silvio Danese,Carlos Cordon-Cardo,Adeeb Rahman,Robert E. Schwartz,Nikhil A. Kumta,Alessio Aghemo,Pamela J. Bjorkman,Francesca Petralia,Harm van Bakel,Adolfo García-Sastre,Saurabh Mehandru +52 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated intestinal infection with SARS-CoV-2, its effect on pathogenesis, and clinical significance, and found a significant reduction in disease severity and mortality in patients presenting with GI symptoms that was independent of sex, age, and comorbid illnesses.